tell me one other language that has the same total feature set?
(that being said, the language integrated async feature set is rather unique - even F#'s asynchronous workflows, though they inspired it, are quite different. Other than C# and VB.Net, that's a fairly unique language feature)
hi there, i can not get the listbox oject in my asp.net mvc action, i dunt know why, please help
@using (Html.BeginForm()){
//...
@Html.ListBox("selectedWorks", new List<SelectListItem>(), new { id = "selectedWorks", style = "width:100px;float:left;", name = "selectedWorks" })
//...
}
var Result = from row1 in t1 join row2 in t2 on row1.ID equals row2.ID join row3 in t3 on row1.ID equals row3.ID select new { ID = row1.ID, Col1 = row2.col1, Col2 = row3.col2 };
function Objects(strElementId) {
}
Objects.prototype.CustomPositioning = function (strElementId) {
};
function Services(strElementId) {
var objects = new Objects(strElementId);
objects.CustomPositioning = function (strElementId) {
// Something to do
}
}
@MRS1367 You can overwrite the function at runtime like that. It's a completely valid construct.
objects.CustomPositioning = function (strElementId) {
// TODO: New code.
// Example of calling base function.
return Objects.prototype.CustomPositioning.call(this, strElementId);
}
And that is how you can call the base function.
Since JS does not even have classes, that's as close as you're going to get :3
I have three pages page1, page2 and page3. In page1 the URL is page1Controller/page1View while it loads the page. After that I load two partial views and that contains lots of dynamic textbox in page1 and then redirect it to the next page2. But if I go back to the previews page it losses the data. But how to bring the same page with data.
I wonder how Tim Cook and Steve jobs got confidence on describing iOS or iPhone as the most advanced, extraordinary and awesome software and hardware in the world.
At my University, two students pair up to complete a difficult project in a time span of 5 months. During that time, we have to work by ourselves at a company that has the project and bring the project to a successful end, write a thesis about it, and defend it during a hearing.
If all goes well you get your software developer degree :P
@drch Pretty interesting, yeah. We're doing a project in the high-throughput fire optics domain, dealing with an existing the computation server. It's written in .NET but is rather slow and we can pull out every trick to make it faster and faster.
Think of doing network restructuring, usage of multiple computers for distributed computation, analysis of precision influences of floating point operations and so forth.
It's a load of work though, but fun to see it go faster.
I have three pages page1, page2 and page3. In page1 the URL is page1Controller/page1View while it loads the page. After that I load two partial views and that contains lots of dynamic textbox in page1 and then redirect it to the next page2. But if I go back to the previews page it losses the data. But how to bring the same page with data.
@codebrain Yeah, I created an account for them to upload content to our Apple Developer Account. Which they apparently lost, they've been using an old outdated developer account from the previous manager that I got fired.
@codebrain How is the Stored Procedure executed? Through your C# I would create a Sql Exception Helper Class, then when I do my execute for my SqlCommand I would simply wrap in the Try and Catch so that it returns a more friendly SQL Exception. Or if you want to look at crazy; just simply use the raw SqlException class; which without filter can return nightmares.
Especially since you know your executing a Stored Procedure you could easily tailor the helper code to focus on some of the most common errors; IE: invalid parameters, bad type, and etc.
@Greg I dont know , he wasnt specify iin what, i said try catch, i got selected in the interview but i just want to be sure i was right though. I thought something must be with sql server to handle exceptions. I never do much of a sql. its not interesting to me.
@Greg and a lot of the stuff they did for processing streams is also being added to IEnumerable<T>. so for example, if you have an IEnumerable<T> of stock prices and timestamps, you could find a list of all the times where the price went up by 10% in 1 hour
or if you wanted to select all the indexes in a collection where it was different from the previous item. or if you want to process a list in groups of 3 like [a,b,c], [b,c,d], [c,d,e] etc
Well, SQL doesn't have much in error handling; mostly because it is a Query language; it is meant for data retrieval. However, C# could handle the error handling well... An example would be a simple Helper Class that essentially would take a SqlException parameter- Then it will perform a switch based on the SqlException number. Then you just handle and filter easier to troubleshoot or understand for the more common SqlException Errors you may retrieve. That way when you use
Try and Catch with a catch(SqlException ex) it doesn't return some long or more technical thing you can have it simplify. Which is nice if you don't want your user to have a huge WTF IS THIS!
@drch Best line ever: "Let me show you my super UI Skill, show you my textbox- Whoa, I didn't expect that to happen." The other line that was great was: "Who designed this freaking database schema, I want to a projection of I don't freaking what this is into a string of strings; of I don't freaking care."