Can anyone think of a reason why this would not work? I have stepped through execution on my controller and I can watch the value being set to true. I have ensure that it is the proper spelling and case in all places.
@rlemon My introduction into this racket was MySpace. I used to make custom profiles. None of that sparkly shit, though. Before that I did a fan page for Diablo, but that was all MS Front Page and I learned nothing and it was awful. Total geocities-esque mess.
i noticed a strange url format recently like this one : http:\/\/example.com\/asd\/asd is that called something special? it was part of a json response
I remember trying to play Diablo 1 online with AOL. It was a pain. You had to launch AOL to connect to the internet, so it was running in the background the whole time.
@CodeWarrior sure thing. There are always people here who are willing to help those who help themselves. It's refreshing to have someone learn - there are so many people here who just beg for code and leave :)
@CodeWarrior can you make a minimal plunkr or fiddle?
Worked at a small dialup provider in New Mexico when I was 15. We got a T1 installed (upgraded from multiple ISDN lines). Played Star Wars Quake for like 3 days straight...
@NickDugger It's not really weak typing; it's still strongly typed, it's just that it saves you the effort of typing out the type name, since the compiler can infer it.
@NickDugger languages like JavaScript deal with memories undeterministically you're never really sure when they'll perform a costly GC cycle, when your file handle goes away or when your point objects get really removed. In modern "unmanaged" languages you treat memory with the same respect as database handles and file handles - resources are a key part of what a program is and it makes a lot of mistakes obvious.
@NickDugger so it's not only about writing an efficient program - GC is pretty fast when given about ram - it's about writing correct and deterministic programs where you know what's happening at every stage.
@NickDugger in unmanaged languages resources are first class citizen and you're very aware of design mistakes like "who owns what", if an object holds another object it's very clear it owns it (or doesn't) - in JS you just do this.foo = bar in C++ there are several ways to associate them.
struct mystruct_t *s = (mystruct_t*)malloc(sizeof(mystruct_t));
if(s == NULL){
return -1;
}
mystruct_doSomething(s);
free(s); // have to remember this, also can't return early at any function ever
Vs:
auto *s = unique_ptr<My>(new My()); // should probably stack allocate
s->doSomething();
Basically, C resource management is a lot more error prone than C++'s
@KendallFrey right, whenever an object goes off the stack in C++ its destructor gets called - this isn't like C# it's absolutely deterministic. Every time something gets popped off the stack the destructor is called.
class Handle{
Handle(){ /* make DB connection */
~Handle(){ /* clear DB connection */
// get here
}
@KendallFrey using is an attempt to add deterministic C++ like resource handling to C#, it's much weaker. For example when does the resource you used get deallocated? What happens if there is an exception thrown in the block and so on - I think i have a question about that with an Eric Lippert answer somewhere.
@KendallFrey that 'determinism' is why finally and using in turn were added into the language but remember that in C++ everything is that deterministic.
@KendallFrey C# has structs which you can use to do this. One of the things languages like C++ and C have and you can get away without noticing in languages like C# is value types.
The fact that RAII Handle trick above works is because it's a value type.
@KendallFrey it actually has reference types but things are pass by reference. This means that when you pass a reference to something into a function you can change it where C# lies about it and you can only change its members if you pass an object in.
@KendallFrey you can have a Foo (that's a Foo) and you can have a Foo& (that's a reference to a foo), you can have a reference to everything (no matter where it is) you also have raw pointers (you can actually mangle memory) but that's not really fun). You haven't called me on the swap thing yet btw :P