i have an xml document, it has a structure similar to
<lineitem>
<offers>
<item> <offerName>banana bread</offerName><otherdataNeedsXformingtoo>blah</otherdataNeedsXformingtoo></item>
<item> <offerName>apple pie</offerName></item>
</offers>
</lineitem>
<lineitem>
<offers>
<item> <offerName>apple bread</offerName></item>
<item> <offerName>banana pie</offerName></item>
</offers>
</lineitem>
<lineitem>
<offers>
<item> <offerName>banana bread</offerName></item>
I have this XML file, from which I'd like to count the number of users referenced in it. But they can appear in more than one category, and I'd like these duplicates not to be taken into account.
In the example below, the query should return 3 and not 4. Is there a way in XPath to do so? Users ar...
An XSLT 1.0 solution that uses key and the generate-id() function to get distinct values:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<xsl:stylesheet
version="1.0"
xmlns:xsl="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform">
<xsl:output method="xml" encoding="UTF-8" indent="yes"/>
<xsl:key name="prod...
@SteveG I think key() should take item, based on the linked example
it's the name of the node whose key is generated, not the name of the seed used to generate the key
if that makes sense
ohhh yeah, the other solution is simpler
not(.=preceding::*) << 'where my value is not the same as the preceding value'. That necessarily excludes duplicates - assuming the list you're selecting from is ordered
Or maybe it's 'not the same as any preceding value'
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@SteveG surely there are promo codes that apply to orders, and promo codes that are per-item? "Get 10% off your order!" vs. "Get a free pen when you buy a battleship!"
Encryption is two way. Hashing is one way. TO encrypt something means you want to decrypt it, you never want to unhash something... and if you do - encrypt it instead
so, I ran an ef migration in vs 2015 and it broke my project hardcore. I am getting stuff like "object does not contain a constructor that takes 0 arguments..."
"The predefined type 'Task' is defined in multiple assemblies in the global alias; using definition from 'mscorlib, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089".... erm, wth did I do @.@
if you're using GetHashCode for security, please reeducate yourself :)
GetHashCode is all about determining if two objects are exactly equal... you need to know the difference between reference/value types, structs, etc... how to compare them
@Pheonixblade9 Oh. I see. This is what it generates:
/// <summary>
/// Serves as a hash function for a particular type.
/// </summary>
/// <returns>
/// A hash code for the current <see cref="T:System.Object"/>.
/// </returns>
public override int GetHashCode()
{
unchecked
{
return (base.GetHashCode() * 397) ^ (_lockManager != null ? _lockManager.GetHashCode() : 0);
}
}
/// <summary>
/// Serves as a hash function for a particular type.
/// </summary>
/// <returns>
/// A hash code for the current <see cref="T:System.Object"/>.
/// </returns>
public override int GetHashCode()
{
return 42;
}
hash function is always correct; no longer breaks C# collections.