hehe me too, i screwed up one good opportunity now i am depressed
should've spent atleast an hour studying services it was just basic service questions like whats the type of services and what exactly are their differences
yea im not well versed with it but according to the interview of the guy behind realm in android it would seem that the api is even more powerful than sql realm.io/news/fragmented-27-christian-melchior
@LawGimenez well the advantage is realm is that its faster because there is no mapping from Objects to relational queries (that you get from ORMs) the objects directly stored in realm db, but if you were to forego ORMs and use raw sql queries then i suppose SQL could be faster, but if you want the features of ORM and keep performance then I suggest realm
@LawGimenez complex queries shouldn't a problem because instead of doing an inner join, you should set up relationships so that all information is available at one time
finally I managed to fix my collegues custom view he had paint initializations and rect initializations in onDraw and he used the same paint instance with a different color to paint the text
i want my company to start sponsoring hackatons but don't know how to start the conversation. we've never had live hardware data before. that's nice api material
we did apps, now we partnered with cools guys and we'll have defibrillator stations with sensors , cameras and shit all around europe providing live data to their owners. could be hackaton api and hack material, health related.
Well, think about what your company would get out of sponsoring a hackathon. Are they trying to recruit? Get their name out there? If they are working on a public/open API, wait until it's ready and suggest going to hackathons and promoting it, offering a sponsored prize to anyone who uses it.
As much as we wish sponsors would do it out of goodwill, it's not always that simple. You have to pinpoint what your company would expect to get out of it, be it recruiting, marketing, exposure, whatever, and then pitch it that way.
So you can definitely pitch it to them that this is a great opportunity for exposure and setting a representation for your company to hundreds of students.
Isn't it a rule of thumb not to default an index variable to 0? Like a navigation index? Why would I start at index 0, if I'm not actually pointing to the list yet? Wouldn't it be better to start at -1, and leave it at -1 until the user selects a navigation item?
So what's happening is like, if you open the app to one page due to a notification (so the nav index is set at 0 when app starts) and then open the nav drawer and try to click the first item, it says "oh, you clicked 0, but I'm at 0, so I don't have to do anything." and so you're stuck on the same page.
Now, there's a lot else wrong here like using activities with their own drawers and not one activity, one drawer, and many fragments, but I have to work with what I have
So that can do some unnecessary work - if I open the app to a certain page, and I click that page in the nav, it will create an intent for that activity again, but everyone seems to be okay with that. :|