Hmm, I didn't think to do that, I'll try, thanks. I've also found the url says "nameit/backwards" if I reverse it, and I've got "wentoo" (toonew) from "sdrawkcab/twix".
This is because Beta.h and Baap.h are different fields. In b.h, Baap.h is called (which is 4) and bb.h, Beta.h is called (which is 44). The difference is that b.getH() calls Beta.getH() (because b is new Beta()) but is reading Baap.h field, while bb.getH() calls Beta.getH().
Take a look at the m...
@Unihedron I was aware of that, I understood based on your answer what the behavior in java was but from the top of my head wasn't sure if c# did the same (I assumed it didn't) but I copied your sample in LinqPad to give it go... :)
Does explain why devs that cross-over between those stacks get confused
@Unihedron The only line of code I written in java that made it into production was System.exit(0); and before that was commited it was closely watched by two java-devs :)
@rene Yeah, I waited a bit as well, to see how things worked, etc. Of course, I've got a few "DV'd to oblivion" posts, but I've learnt, and eventually ended posting stuff like this. ;)
You're compiling without specifying a output "root" for the compiler to build up a package hierarchy from - so it just puts the class files in the same directory as the source files. Then it tries to find the classes later on, but it can't find classes in the efgh package, because you're already ...
Realistically, I think cinemas are going to become a thing of the past. The prices nowadays are ridiculous. ~£70 for 5 people, when I could pay ~£5 per month for Netflix.
Not to mention the half hour of ads before the film actually starts :P