i suppose i'm just screwing myself up because I don't trust users and I want to add a couple more color states depending on if it's unedited but checked, checked and edited, checked but processed, etc.
I've been searching for the answer and could not find one:
Is there a XSD key/keyref validation support via Intellisense in Visual Studio 2010?
If so, how to make it work?
If no, is there a (built-in) way in Visual Studio to do key/references validation in an XML having an XSD schema at all?
...
Instead of screening I am going to try to use the data explorer, but I seem to forming a bad SQL query..Can anyone spot what is wrong here?
DECLARE @RepFilter int = 50000
SELECT ParentId as [Post Link]
FROM Posts
INNER JOIN Users
ON Posts.OwnerUserId = Users.Id
WHERE Users.Reputation > @RepFilter
Starting with Pentium 4, Intel redesigned it's microprocessors and use internal RISC core under the old CISC instructions. Since Pentium 4 all CISC instructions are divided into smaller parts and then executed by mentioned RISC core.
At the beginning it was clear for me, that Intel decided to h...
the key difference is you have to load and unload the registries manually. This gives you a performance bump if you don't need to load new data into the register for the next instruction.
RISC CPUs are also faster per instruction, by virtue of having smaller, simpler instructions, which means decoding is cheaper. Decoding is generally the most expensive (longest) part of an instruction execution
(except for branches, which take two, but they cheat by executing the following instruction at the same time, so it's still KINDA 1 instruction per cycle)
@zneak yeah, we won lots of extra credit, like 156%, our design was WAY smaller and faster than all of the PHD students :P Ours was like 160ux180u, the next best was like 800ux900u :D
and a lot of instructions have the same syntax (though this is more true of RISC- than CISC-inspired ISAs)
one thing I'll never forgive to x86 is the brokenness of multiplications and divisions and the nightmare it becomes for register allocation that just some instructions always output to fixed registers
Apparently I have great communication skills, but I get a bit too technical when talking to some audiences, so I have to work on that... no more jargon
I am currently working on a C# program where I have the need to combine a bunch of time ranges. For each range I have the start and end time. I found an example where this was being done in Ruby but not for C#. I am basically looking for the time range union. I feel like there might be a way to d...
because without DB access, I can't connect the SharePoint BCS to the table, which means I can't create an external content type, which means I can't create an external list, which means I can't complete this task.
and I don't have sa access to the MS Dynamics DB server.
yawn
at least I don't have to jump through red tape to get it done, like with a previous employer that required 15 different approvals to make A F@#$$ING CSS CHANGE.
I want to write some tests for this kind of things:
public void Merge(TimeRange timeRange)
{
if(!IsOverLap(timeRange))
throw new ArgumentException("Cannot merge timeranges that don't overlap","timeRange");
if (End < timeRange.End)
End = timeRange.End;
if (timeRange.Start < Start)
Start = timeRange.Start;
}
@KendallFrey Hey, U probably don't remember, but u helped me with cursor.clip on Sunday and I just wanted to tell u it worked perfectly and my application is nearly done
[TestFixture]
public class NewTest
{
[Test]
public void WhatGetsPrinted()
{
A a = new B();
a.Print();
}
}
public class A
{
public void Print() { Console.WriteLine("A"); }
}
public class B : A
{
public new void Print(){ Console.WriteLine("B");}
}
Heh. I'm watching "Andromeda Strain" on netflix. There's a shot of these "highly trained electronics engineers" pawing at circuit boards, no grounding, nothing on their hands. They're smearing their fingers over ICs. Michael Crichton was a crank.