Well, the obvious is the difference: URL encoding handles special characters that you want to have in an URL, but should not have there, HTML encoding does the same, just for HTML
hello sorry for disturbing, quick question: in console app how can ii write to read an integer form keyboard and show it's every third number? for example: A= 3297388765 and show 9 8 6
hello sorry for disturbing, quick question: in console app how can ii write to read an integer form keyboard and show it's every third number? for example: A= 3297388765 and show 9 8 6
C#
Let's just initialize a list of bytes with every byte value from 0 to 255.
List<byte> bytes = new List<byte>();
for (byte i = 0; i <= 255; i++)
{
bytes.Add(i);
}
Out of memory? I distinctly recall having more than 256 bytes installed...
Spoiler:
Stack Overflow allows spoilers in the form:
>! SPOILER
Example:
Why doesn't chat support them? They would be quite useful, especially for rooms that are frequently off topic and often have dicussions about movies etc.
Many other sites, like Arqade, would make even better use of spoilers.
yeah, since the size of an allocated block is effectively stored alongside it (in the heap), or remembered and substituted by the compiler (on the stack).
You can use sizeof(ptr) to get the allocated size in bytes of that pointer.
If an array is allocated on the stack (in the local scope), then most common compilers remember its size in bytes.
Some memory-tracking allocators provided by compilers and standard libraries track heap-allocations by prefixing them with a header before the first pointed-to address, which contains the allocation size.
In fact, it's on this basis that free() and realloc() works.
Whether or not sizeof uses that, though, is dependent on the compiler.
Use sizeof(array) / sizeof(type).
Then test it.
If it works, you're golden (at least on that platform)
If it doesn't, try something else.
Then make a repeatable unit test out of it, so you can verify the abilities of your target platform.
Then, if you really want, wrap it in a function that uses macros or a simple conditional test to conditionally swap out behavior based on the capabilities of the target platform.
This is the wild-west engineering process for software development in cross-platform C.
@KendallFrey :3 A symbol meant to represent the cat face made by anime characters when they say something clever, or sarcastic, or are commenting on something cute.
@KendallFrey :3 Kinda the '~nya!'(japanese phonetication of english, kitty sound) of the internet. Used to indicate coyness, cleverness, anime-geekiness, cuteness and funny (if not questionably oafy) behavior.
@KendallFrey :3 an expression used to try to act cute, often used after something weird.
How to make it so if the text on a label is more then 30 letters then the program will make another label and continue the text... text is: Environment.CurrentDirectory
You can't parse [X]HTML with regex. Because HTML can't be parsed by regex. Regex is not a tool that can be used to correctly parse HTML. As I have answered in HTML-and-regex questions here so many times before, the use of regex will not allow you to consume HTML. Regular expressions are a tool th...
I oͮ̄̏̒ͪ͂͏͉̼ͅfficially hat*̶͑̾̾̅ͫ͏̙̤e yo̭̰̬̯̦̻ͣ̃ͪ͆̾ͅu Re̿̔̉gular Expre̿̔̉ssio̵̢͈̬̱͇̣̲͓̯͕̜̩͖̔ͬͫ͆ͨͤns, the re̿̔̉alm o͒̋͊̌ͪ̉̑ͦ͒̊̆͂̕͟҉̬̺͔̭͇̱̤͈̮̲̪̲͕̖̝̳̣͕f my sanity is dimi*̶͑̾̾̅ͫ͏̙̤nishing.
@KendallFrey Yeah, my favorite line was "Not even Jon Skeet can parse HTML with Regex."
what defines a regular langauge? tried googling it and the answer was: regular language is a formal language that can be expressed using a regular expression. which isn't very helpful
The collection of regular languages over an alphabet Σ is defined recursively as follows:
The empty language Ø is a regular language. For each a ∈ Σ (a belongs to Σ), the singleton language {a} is a regular language. If A and B are regular languages, then A ∪ B (union), A • B (concatenation), and A* (Kleene star) are regular languages. No other languages over Σ are regular.
So, I'm profiling my code with VS, and it shows 40% of the time is spent in one of my methods. How can I determine if this is primarily executing code or with the thread in WaitSleepJoin?
Anyone know how to use browser protocol in C# ? i added registry entries to start my program, but how can i take a command (example kill the program) "myprotocol://kill" ?
@JohanLarsson Depends on what you're doing, but dictionary creation is slow(ish), so just creating for one or two searches, especially for a small collection, will slow it down. Profiling is the only way to know for sure, though