o_0 eclipse is reporting errors that an inherited function does not exist...
user1804599
Public methods in controllers are both used for validation callbacks and for request handlers. As a consequence, you can go to /mycontroller/myvalidationcallback and it executes the validation callback as if it were a request handler.
AS3, I'm asking for the class definition of something with a runtime-build name, and now I need to wrap that with a try-catch because it doesn't return null if not found.
"please find me this thing" "huh... that does not appear to exist... erhghqarnavuharvuarvuiarq4t4~# I CANNY COPE WITH THIS!!!!" <-- throwing 'not found exception'
I think code will better illustrate my need:
template <typename F>
struct return_type
{
typedef ??? type;
};
so that:
return_type<int(*)()>::type -> int
return_type<void(*)(int,int)>::type -> void
I know of decltype and result_of but they need to have arguments passed. I want to deduce th...
never before have I had the distinguished opportunity of the notion "In the future, call this function and if you're lucky, there might be a T available."
but I'd say that really trends into the "semantics" part for which unless I want to start formally verifying the entire program, there's no inference or checking available.
ultimately, it's only really possible for me to verify that a type meets an interface; and I've been thinking about some sort of tagging that would permit types to claim that they meet a semantic concept; but there's nothing I can do about inferring such things.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Right, but I think that's a miscommunication here, because I'm looking at/thinking about entirely separate feature sets to handle those.
when I speak about inferring constraints, that's interface constraints only.
other constraints, I know I will need another solution.
I see it all as the interface, and that the language does not allow to express such interfaces I see as a weakness (a hard one to overcome entirely, sure). In the end, I see constraint sets as types or type families.
I intend to make interface constraints and semantic constraints separate primarily because I can trivially infer interface constraints and not semantic constraints.
Is it possible to start devenv by yourself inside your environment. Then get your hands on the running Visual Studio Instance via the running object table (ROT).
// Get an instance of the currently running Visual Studio IDE.
EnvDTE80.DTE2 dte2;
dte2 = (EnvDTE80.DTE2)System.Runtime.InteropServic...
@R.MartinhoFernandes Well, it's also a readability issue. If I sit down and read some code, then whether or not the operator <>£$"%^"> means SWO or not is not going to be in my head.
@LucDanton Yes, it simply didn't occur to me that when you said "separate operator", you might have meant something other than literally a new operator.
did I mention that I have five thousand lines of analyzer, where I'm going to have to replace almost all uses of Expression but not enough to use an automated replacement tool?
@LucDanton I don't like that it attaches a single total order to a type. It should be something for functions, not types. That said, I don't know if the type system could support this properly.
If you go data Expr a where Str :: String -> Expr String; Number :: Int -> Expr Int then you guarantee that there won't be any Expr Double in your program. Although if e.g. you make Expr a functor you can still have Expr [Int] and what have you. So there's some genericity, but not too much.
In that instance. Passing a rank 2 typed function around doesn't taste the same, I would say.
It helped me a lot when a paper pointed out to me that a universal quantification in a data constructor means an existential quantification when destructing. That's type erasure.
@LucDanton: Y'know, I was wondering how somebody on std-discussion would worry over copyability of functors, and only now I noticed that the thread was by you :P