@cHao Do you know why it would give me: BUILD FAILED C:\Users\cc\Desktop\aima-core\build.xml:43: java.lang.UnsupportedClassVersionError: com/sun/tools/javac/Main : Unsupported major.minor version 51.0 even though my JDK is updated and so is my eclipse?
hey anyone know where I would ask a question about ftp problems, ping, traceroute, stuff like that. It seems like it wouldn't be the right question to ask at stackoverflow
But yeah, i was having problems earlier about apparantly having improper JDK, googled the issue and ended up adding the jdk's tool.jar into ANTS, that gave me the above error. But i removed that and then it gave me an option to compile via JUNIT, and now it is testing..
Then I think you need && not || and if the argument in isset is "" it is considered as set. So initialize that value to null initially or use another check
> Any method that matches the delegate's signature, which consists of the return type and parameters, can be assigned to the delegate. This makes is possible to programmatically change method calls, and also plug new code into existing classes. As long as you know the delegate's signature, you can assign your own delegated method.
> This ability to refer to a method as a parameter makes delegates ideal for defining callback methods. For example, a sort algorithm could be passed a reference to the method that compares two objects. Separating the comparison code allows the algorithm to be written in a more general way.
Lambdas are internally rewritten as delegates if I'm not mistaken. (Which I might be, C# is not my strong suit.)
> A lambda expression is an anonymous function that can contain expressions and statements, and can be used to create delegates or expression tree types.
@LucDanton the proper generalization of 2 + 2 = 4 is 2 op 2 = 4, for any basic fundamental arithmetic operation op (like +, *, ^, ^^, ^^^ and so on), i.e. "2 and 2 is 4" always.
ouch, if i was eating anything it would have killed me, johannes' "decay an array to a pointer" in that link. hah. i think i would kill any person who actually wrote that in code.
More seriously the type returned by success() implicitly converts to int and without that conversion the test would have caught it, so yes, the former.