make a video of the program and ask people to watch it
well it has a setup. So a 32 bit target or 64. And explanatory notes from msft what it will run on. Such as .net x.y is avail on the following ABC whereas say .net m.n is avail on DEF
There has got to be good doc on the VC++ runtime that all the .net stuff bundles
I recommend setting up a test lab VM wise for Vista, XP, 7,8 10 perhaps Azure. I know they have windows client vs using server products. If that doesn't work then Bizspark has every version of windows and dos. You could create them with a boot mgr
how would having the OS and running your program not allow you to test the UX?
well if you made avail the use of the VM to others you could test their experience.
So you have 2 things here. (1) does it setup and run a certain os (2) people's experience
You can make a VM available. Not your system.
The use of a VM is an instance. They are free to crap it out.
That is what you want or not idk
Right. Do that via a cloud provider that allows for workstation vm's. Historically it has been just server-grade. I believe it was relaxed.
The vm is not on your physical machine west of boston
so back to my list of 2. You can satisfy your own curiosity for vista and XP. You can determine if the setup works on say all 5 versions. For the 2nd step, you point people to a single VM instance. They can destroy the thing. It will not impact your saved stamped out VM baseline version.
@Gothdo I see your point but disagree. The op's question should have been 'how to iterate child elements of a known type within a parent with a known id?' Getting to the text attribute was secondary. Its not a duplicate of the post you linked to.
Is this giant how-to guide on how to debug PHP a useful duplicate for anything other than too-broad "how do I debug stuff" or software request "what software should I use to debug stuff" questions?
Dupehammering a question should include some sort of "thanks for providing a signpost! what a great question!" message so that people don't take it as an insult that their question got closed.
3
Maybe that'd be a good meta question: "How can we soften the blow of the dupehammer?"
meeh, I don't think so... it's only 1 rep... to compensate all the darn dv you get...
dupe hammering by now is the most important thing to keep SO ok, and it actually provides and answer, so 1 rep seems more then fair... if reopened then you loose it.
I generate the rep I need for downvoting unnecessary answers to poor questions by posting unnecessary answers to poor questions answering valuable, unique questions.
@BhargavRao I don't see this is a good idea. In Python, names are only references, they don't even represent the object. What if you have two names referencing the same object (which is very common)? Imo that's what OP does not understand.
Okay, apparently "solved" means "flag declined, my comments removed, OP's insulting comments retained, dupe unhammered, equally hacky and unreliable dupe rehammered, OP emphasizes how bad my dupe was and how good the new one is."
@TigerhawkT3: Wait, it was not you deleting your comments? Without any judging, that leaves quite a lot of the other comments without any context. If not for being insulting (I'm not surea bout that), they should be removed as pointless now.
@Olaf Yeah, wasn't me. I dupehammered something, OP insulted me for it, my comments were nuked, the dupe was changed to an equally useful/useless one, and the OP expressed his thanks for helping get rid of that darn TigerhawkT3 and his useless dupe.
"seriously, what can't you understand" and "Many frameworks need the name of a property/method to do their jobs, maybe your're not aware of" are apparently polite discourse, while "some objects have a name, and you can access it with __name__, but others don't" is unacceptable.
@Kyll So I raised a query with @Gothdo about a question he had duped yesterday and he seems adamant that it should stay. I think otherwise. I don't want to start a fight over it, but assuming that SO is about community then it should not be for those who are 'expert' to pull up the ladder after themselves and leave people who know less with a more difficult path to learning. The dup is wrong. Thanks for asking.
@TigerhawkT3 Honestly: I don't think they are overly unpolite. All a matter of context. I used them myself if the other seems to be really stubborn. In dubio pro reo, OP might have the same impression of you. Disclaimer: That's not what I think! Just try to see both sides. Whatever, if I had comments removed, normally also other comments were deleted, just because they lost context.
@Cerbrus I see the OP's desire as irrelevant. On the one hand we won't delete a question only because the OP wants it gone. On the other hand if the Q would be one that would otherwise be one I'd delete, I'll just vote to delete. If the OP gets his/her/its wish due to quality control, then so be it.