Last chance to migrate these comments to a chatroom before I flag them and they all get permanently nuked by a mod. — Lightness Races in Orbit4 mins ago
@R.MartinhoFernandes I've undone it again, but I'll only do it once, and if I weren't the only one with an actual user account then I wouldn't have done it at all.
In its most common usage the word basically seems to mean "I'm not going to back up my claim with any kind of evidence or logical arguments, but I'm right anyway!"
@AlexM. electric grinders are bad for two reasons: a) blades cut the beans in an uneven fashion, which is bad for the taste b) they can overheat the coffee to the point of burning it, which is bad for the taste
b) isn't that important if you grind small amounts of coffee, but a) has tremendous impact.
ffs soundcloud doesn't ask for confirmation when you accidentally hit the "Like" button on your "Likes" page ... the song just vanishes immediately leaving you with no clue what it was that you loved so much -.
ive never used C# so i think there's this fundamental gap in my understanding; why cant you just use a simple template class Property<T> and give it a getter and setter? is there something else properties do?
"Please provide documentation of each step." These requests always make me laugh. It's the equivalent of putting up a sign that says "I don't want to do my homework, please do it for me." — Borgleader8 secs ago
@Pris At a guess, that's because you're trying to find something useful there. You're missing the point that in the vast majority of cases, they just don't make any sense at all. People are taking what are conceptually simple variables, and turning them into "properties" in the mistaken belief that this is somehow object oriented.
@Pris If cost of reassignment really matters, the assignment operator likely does that check already. If it doesn't, it should. Or still probably not. Reassignment doesn't really happen that often.
@R.MartinhoFernandes ...but it can only make sense at all for a case where comparison is significantly cheaper than assignment. That can work for things like a string that's stored with a hash, and you only copy the string if the hashes differ, but in most cases, comparison is (at least) as expensive as copying, so it's a net loss.
the abstraction of a "property" becomes slightly useful if setting the value has to perform other (related) actions, e.g. firing an event or logging a message. But if all it has to do is wrap the value (like it does in your example above), then you can just expose a value
@Pris When you actually want something useful (and it can happen), you usually should not have a get and a set. You should have an operator T and a operator=, so assigning to this variable uses the same syntax as assigning to other variables.