When we have two structs, and one is implicitly convertible to the other, then it seems like the System.Nullable<> versions of the two are also implicitly convertible. Like, if struct A has an implicit conversion to struct B, then A? converts to B? as well.
Here is an example:
struct MyNu...
lol, jon skeet's words "I would be interested to measure my levels of testosterone when typing furiously away at an answer, hoping to craft something useful before anyone else does. I'm never going to be "macho" physically, but I can certainly be an alpha geek. So long as it doesn't go too far, I think it's a positive thing."
I basically have two classes A class to display the view and handle the events. Add and Subtract A class that does the addition. MathForms (methods: Add_Click, Subtract_Click) MathController(methods: Add, Subtract)
In object-oriented programming, the single responsibility principle states that every object should have a single responsibility, and that responsibility should be entirely encapsulated by the class. All its services should be narrowly aligned with that responsibility.
The term was introduced by Robert C. Martin in an article by the same name as part of his Principles of Object Oriented Design, made popular by his book Agile Software Development, Principles, Patterns, and Practices. Martin described it as being based on the principle of cohesion, as described by Tom DeMarco in his boo...
@SpencerRuport Not necessarily. Code comments can make bad code readable. And the inverse of that statement isn't true either. SRP doesn't necessarily mean readable code.
@LewsTherin - Well if you're finding that your usercontrols need to call functions they shouldn't know about odds are you need to define an event so your form can bind the event to a method that will in turn call that function.
@KendallFrey - Right I understood what you meant. I'm just speaking from my experience. Programs that completely dismiss SRP are always more difficult to understand and programs that adhere to it are always at least a little easier to understand.
But obviously there's a lot more that goes into application design than just naming conventions.
I just don't think that comments ever add much in practice.
We are using WCF service
on the client side we are planning to explicitly close the connection
It seems there are more then one way of closing
Sample1:
In the finally block of the WCF service consumption use
if (client.State == CommunicationState.Faulted)
{
client.Abort();
}
client.Close()...
Well if you want a property, something that's permanent to be based on the value of a user control perhaps you need to make it so that usercontrol is always created?
Maybe it would help if you described what you're trying to do.
On WCF, there doesn't seem to be any way to separate out your methods in some kind of logical categories without just creating multiple services. But if you have multiple services you'll need multiple session connections if you want to access them all at once on a single page.
So if you want something external to change based on when the add button is clicked on the user control I would make the Add button even trigger a custom event for your usercontrol called OnAdd or something.
Lews if you want your user control to have a specific behavior you might look into creating a standard API for your logic entities, having the buttons add remove make method calls to those and then have the logic entities fire their own events which trigger an update to other controls on your form.
Hey, I'm having an issue in Visual Studio 2010 where I have a solution with two projects. Properties of a single class have been changed in one project. In particular, I deleted one of the properties of the object represented by the class. Even after compiling/and clean-and-build-ing the solution, intellisense still sees that property; and if I use the property, the project still compiles successfully, but does not run. Any idea how to get out of this state?
Well the issue is most likely in there somewhere then.
Plus, you should open your question with that. If your question is about a stale reference and you use a custom build system that's pretty relevant information don't you think?
I would have figured when I used Visual Studio's build operation, it wouldn't matter the method I usually built, because VS would do what it does best.
There's usually well-marked paths. This is just a strange situation. I was hoping the issue was a simple "Oh, you just derped up Visual Studio, here delete this cache file and rebuild"
I've directly linked the aforementioned project file. The build is taking a LOT longer than it used to. I think this is a good thing.