error CS0121: The call is ambiguous between the following methods or properties: `MathNet.Numerics.LinearAlgebra.Matrix<double>.ToString(string, System.IFormatProvider)' and `MathNet.Numerics.LinearAlgebra.Matrix<double>.ToString()' How can these two methods possibly be ambiguous? They have totally different argument counts!
I also asked on an IRC chat -- they figure the problem is with who wrote the library. My code looked like: Debug.Log(xMatrix1.ToString() + " \n<--->" xMatrix2.ToString());
They suggested just using the workaround Debug.Log(xMatrix1 + "\n<-->\n" + xmatrix2); (IE, not explicitly calling ToString, since ToString should be called by string concatenation automatically)
@KendallFrey I am a noob at replies, sorry. Check above
This is strange. I'm modifying a richtextbox with elements from a JSON. The first first...then the second...doesn't. It's strange. Well better yet...The second works and the first doesn't.
I'll just post a screenshot
First element pulled...for some reason it's underlying EVERYTHING, which it should only do in the first line (you'll see in the second shot..) http://i.gyazo.com/24a0d4fa4a15ab087793f4f3b07a9fa1.png
Here's what it should look like which it does right in the second element pulled. http://i.gyazo.com/12b178a8e772acd7551df0051544c752.png
I can't seem to figure out what's going on here.
Tried to add another element, completely skipped over the element in the first shot
It does not work in every single element, except the last one.
although establishes a set of available operations - I'd expect the domain model to be able to do that itself
Maybe if you delegate out things like available to a particular user to a service layer, that reasoning makes sense. I don't think authorization is something a domain model ought to be doing itself
The distinction is more important the more loosely coupled your solution is, I think. For a single web application with some persistence for example, manipulating the domain model in-proc might work fine for you
it's a bit different when two or more unrelated systems have to access the same model
Yeah, I could see how that separation would make sense. For a small universal application though, the Domain could simply handle that mediation. Or would that violate the separation of concerns?
I wouldn't have an explicit service layer unless the application is distributed and therefore the domain model lives on different machines. If you're doing querying and persistence purely in-process (i.e. no calls elsewhere) then I don't think there's any relevant service logic to do that would violate SoC
As long as your domain model is capable of validating changes to itself somehow (e.g. FU you can't add record x as an association of record y or FU you're not the owner of record z)
Doesn't work for everyone. My parents have a loft full of stuff that was pulled out of the previous loft and shoved into the current one when they last moved 25 years ago and hasn't been touched since
Yes, I seem to spend most of my free time doing dishes or laundry. I'm a single person with no dependents, I eat out a lot and I don't do anything special that dirties clothes. Why the hell do I have so much of either
good question, I originally had one grid, thats now split into two. @KendallFrey so setting the Horizontal/VerticalAlignment will reduce the overall size of the button?
okay that did change the positioning to the correct position, but the size of the button is much too big. Is there any way I can adjust the size without adding margins?
@JohanLarsson you know the way I used ICommand to submit data to the database in my app? Could I use the same thing to reset a variable's value on a button click?
hey quick noob question: how do you make File.WriteAllLines() overwrite the text in the text file? Would've tried harder to find answer on my own, but I'm in hurry