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00:34
Surely to have a 'standard' it needs to be curated by someone who doesn't just take the piss?
Unicode is a standard, is it not?
9
A: Why can a Double be added to a List of Integers?

dasblinkenlightThe reason for this is type erasure: the fact that this is a list of Integers is known to the compiler, not to the JVM. Once the code is compiled, List<Integer> becomes List<Object>, allowing the reflection-based code complete with no errors. Note that your own code has a strong hint at the rea...

Java is type-safe, the JVM is not.
Silly Java.
 
3 hours later…
03:08
Hello friends
any one who is expert in MVC?
 
4 hours later…
07:23
Hi Guys!
Good morning!
posted on December 01, 2013 by Scott Hanselman

  One of the most wonderful and least appreciated things about computers is diversity of devices. You're probably interacting with your computer with a keyboard and mouse. But in the last few years, you may have added touch and, to a limited extent, voice. The photo above is of my desk. Yes, it's messy. On it are the things I use to work with my computer. I use these nearly every day an

 
4 hours later…
10:56
hi. Anyone knows something about rsa encryption? I need to keep Rsa private key outsite the program and allow user to pass private key when needed . How to do this?
 
3 hours later…
14:20
hey hey
anybody around?
Is there a built-in string method to test its numericality ? That is, it contains only numerical digits? No trimming or tryparsing it..
hello Steve!
well
int.tryparse([...])
to try to parse it to an int, or theres like double.tryparse
but realize that things like scientific notation would also pass the test
I have a shopping cart. Its stored in a session. My controller in an mvc4 app uses this to add and remove items from the cart. How do I unit test this? My unit tests are obviously in a separate project and have no access to the session variable
thanks :)
Is there any way to force a string to start at a certain position in a textbox no matter what stands before it? Like padleft(x) from the border.
@Annie: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/7f0ddtxh(v=vs.110).aspx
You can write an extension method to test the string chars.
Nothing built in already in other words?
String.Format("{0, StartPosition}", myString);
Would like to do somehting like that ^
15:04
@PeterKiss, thanks. I just build this helper method:

        private static bool TestNumericality(string input)
        {
            foreach (char digit in input)
            {
                if (!Char.IsDigit(digit))
                {
                    return false;
                }
            }
            return true;
        }
 
2 hours later…
16:38
public static class StringHelpers
{
public static bool IsOnlyNumeric(this string input)
{
return input.All(Char.IsDigit);
}
}
@PeterKiss, thanks! that's so concise!
incidentally, between != and !obj.Equals(..), which one is more performant? Given we have tons of comparison operations in a task..
easy way to find out:
compile an example and dissasemble it with ILDASM, and compare the IL
My hunch is that for reference types the IL will be identical
@TomW, for values?
Again this is a guess, but I think it would depend on the type. obj.Equals is still reference equality unless overrridden and still means the same thing. I don't know how value equality is implemented
!testString.Equals("This is to compare testString") vs. testString != "This is to compare testString"
16:50
dagnabbit. Optimisation kicks in on a trivial example
@PeterKiss, I am also testing `.`. How would this be incorporated in your proposed lambda expression:

if (!Char.IsDigit(digit) && digit != '.') ..
ok, value types:
.method public hidebysig instance void doEquality(int32 a,
int32 b) cil managed
{
// Code size 11 (0xb)
.maxstack 2
.locals init (bool V_0)
IL_0000: nop
IL_0001: ldarga.s a
IL_0003: ldarg.2
IL_0004: call instance bool [mscorlib]System.Int32::Equals(int32)
IL_0009: stloc.0
IL_000a: ret
} // end of method equality::doEquality
that's obj.Equals
this is !=
.method public hidebysig instance void doEquality(int32 a,
int32 b) cil managed
{
// Code size 10 (0xa)
.maxstack 2
.locals init (bool V_0)
IL_0000: nop
IL_0001: ldarg.1
IL_0002: ldarg.2
IL_0003: ceq
IL_0005: ldc.i4.0
IL_0006: ceq
IL_0008: stloc.0
IL_0009: ret
} // end of method equality::doEquality
@Annie return input.All(x => char.IsDigit(x) || x == '.');
@TomW, thanks! so Equals is much faster! :)
@PeterKiss, thanks that's very intuitive! and thank you System.Linq..
hm?
There's a method call in the first example
that in itself is a lot of work, relatively speaking
ignoring all this, there may well be some JIT optimisation as well, which this won't expose
17:08
Oh, perhaps the `call instance bool ..` can't generate optimized instructions than the bare bone:

IL_0003: ceq
IL_0005: ldc.i4.0
IL_0006: ceq
That's probably a compiler magic for built-in constructs string/char/int. I guess in general the user-defined classes might have the equality operator overloaded, that is also called as a method..
18:02
hi
anyone knwos signalr
?
does anyone know signalr?
in here
18:33
hi
18:51
hi
whats up
bf3.. you?
 
3 hours later…
21:43
guys, if I have a WCF service..
static members will be accessed by all calls to the service.. right?
and private members will be accessed on call basis?
what about public members?
 
2 hours later…
23:31
:)

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