I have the following code to convert byte data to base64 string :
ReDim g_Template(dwLen) As Byte
i = 0
Do While Len(m_strTemplate) > 0
iPos = InStr(1, m_strTemplate, "$")
If (iPos > 0) Then
g_Template(i) = Mid(m_strTemplate, 1, iPos - 1)
m_strTe...
@scheien There are also extensions you can get that basically put an air gap between you and the chair. That completely ignores the chair's ergonomics though.
Or, actually, maybe it just gives you a push layer, regardless of what you do with it. If it has bindings for Reactive Extensions for C#, for instance, it can be pretty nice.
It's, as I said, a standard trick. Good reason not to accept anything you see at face value - just because someone posts a screenshot of CNN.com saying something doesn't mean it was actually published.
@RoelvanUden true but I might like would you use it to watch tv, go on the computer or sleeping. Main function wise. I guess it was a stupid question :P
I think the force is with someone at meta and hushed a fix
Like the support errand I had last Friday... Customer had issues getting purchase order to their FTP. They contacted the other company providing them with files. Got a reply that "everything seems to work just fine"....5 minutes later they started receiving orders.... hmmmm
Someone replied to my question "With enough waffles the unicorns do magic things"
If you are following the MVVM pattern and you have Domain Models some of which inherit from a base class, how then do you implement the ViewModels that match those DomainModels including the inheritance?
Do you create a base Abstract ViewModel class that mirrors the Abstract base Domain Model class?
For instance, we have two model classes, Entity and Relation, which have VM classes Node and Edge. The model classes share a base class, the VMs don't, because they don't share much functionality.
Somewhere else we have a different model hierachy (CaseActivity, with several derived classes such as CaseUpdatedActivity, CaseAssignedActivity, etc). In this case, we do have a matching VM hierarchy to reuse code.
what do you think, what is faster? ---------------------------------- // Sol 1 int i = 0; foreach (var e in elements) { e.EatE(i); i++; } -- or ---------------------------- // Sol 2 for (int i = 0; i < elements.Count; i++) elements[i].EatE(i);
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan so.. I'm still kinda scratching my head at this. The situation I'm dealing with is UserAccounts. So Ideally I could have an Abstract NewUserAccountBase, from which NewStaffAccount, NewStudentAccount, NewGuestAccount, etc inherit from.
Because so many of the properties are the same. If I ever need to add an additional shared property it could be added to just the base class instead of updating all the ViewModels individually to have it
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan I am refactoring the classes actually. They were orignally all one NewUserModel.. But to me it got really messy. You have a good core set of shared propeties, but then there are numerous other unshared properties that make the entire model bloated
@mikeTheLiar what do you think? Single DomainModel, Single VM, Single View (Lots of Cons, hard to maintain, lots of javascript) OR Multiple DomainModels (Inheritance), Multiple ViewModels (Similar Inheritance to DomainModels), Multiple Views (with _Partials)
Quick question: I found this class in my code base.
public class TokenInfo
{
public TokenInfo();
public string access_token { get; set; }
public int expires_in { get; set; }
public string token_type { get; set; }
}
I'm not sure if it needs a body or not because it isn't abstract
You'd only need to explicitly define the empty constructor if you had another constructor that accepted parameters, in which case the compiler wouldn't add it for you
Boo. Anyone using the MS Bot Framework? I'm looking for some suggestions on how to connect it to IRC. So far my best idea is to build a custom client and have it relay messages.
I need to use udp and tcp connections in my application,the TcpClient/TcpListener would rarely be active,but the udp one would be the main usage.
This is the server code:
static void Main(string[] args)
{
TcpListener listener = new TcpListener(IPAddress.Any, 25655);
lis...
Is anyone good at polymorphism using overloaded methods? I've been tasked with creating a base class representing "all products" and adding a class for each product type that contains that product's attributes. I've completed this part, however, i'm struggling with condensing the data back down.
There is a method in the base class called ToJson() that does exactly that.. It makes JSON of the attributes on ALL product types. In each derived class, there is an override for ToJson() that does just that type's attributes. How do i combine the output of those 2 methods using best practice?
I've considered calling base.ToJson() and then pulling that output into the derived class, but that "feels" like i'm going the wrong way with things.. Like i'm going 'up the down slide' so to speak
Either way will have the same results. You can either do what you said, or you take the iOS ICoding route and create an object to store attributes and simply have your class add to that object (pass it as a parameter).
hello guys i want to create an auto self updater for my c# winform app my problem is that i don't want to get a project with auto installer i need to have an exe and on start to check his version.
@gtzinos You're app will need to know how to find stuff, and connect to a service outside your app to get it
Usually applications have 2 executables for this. First one launches the 2nd and also checks for updates for the 2nd.
@CarComp Polymophism doesn't mean you need a base class. It means you're classes, interfaces, etc. should be interchangable. Many studies and current thoughts for development are saying never use base classes, just build dependencies and inject the necessary functionality