@Greg The compiler can differentiate between methods and types, so List<T> and Where<T> will not conflict with anything in C#. The methods available in the repo were meant to reflect the same methods you would find in the framework, so that developers wouldnt have to remember weird names like "repository.MagicalSearch<T>" when "Where<T>" is more natural and just plain makes sense.
If I bind to LoggedIn for instance, the binding works, and "True" is output on the textblock
but if I bind to Gender, nothing shows, although in the initLogin() I have set a breakpoint and ` _loginObj.Gender = me.gender;` is being assigned a gender value
so it must be the way I've set up the property then.
if for example I bind to Gender, and set up a default value for Gender like this ` private string _gender = "male"; the binding does show `
just testing with brek point now on Gender
okay so after setting breakpoint on Gender, the get is called and then it steps into the initLogin and assigns the values, but the set in Gender is never called..which is where the problem is I think? @CharlieBrown
Guys, is there a site on the SE network where you can ask a programming question asking for advice on how to resolve a particular issue, even if there is no code to show, or, even if the answer is expected to be simply a logical thought process which helps teach how something should be done? That doesn't sound like a good fit for SO, because I always see questions like that get downvoted and closed.
@RoelvanUden I have a asp.net mvc app where some admins complain its running slow. I just need to log TTFB metrics on the machine. So, I thought to ask if there is any existing solution to do it. Or should I just log time using action's begin and end handler?
@SamyS.Rathore The stories I've read about counter offers is that when you accept one, your company is usually looking for a replacement that they can get cheaper. That, and no promotions or raises in the future.
Recruiter called into my office. Ladies at the call center picked it up and told me they wanted to talk to me about a reference for a old co-student. I got the call, he was there to recruit me into whatever-the-fuck he was about! Blatant lies, these guys are shameless. Am I the only one that gets seriously pissed off about these tactics and doesn't want anything to do with people that employ them?! I pretty much smacked the horn down..
@Sippy I had a recruitment agency that wanted me to fill out some forms. It included things like "programming in HTML" (what... I don't even...) and things that didn't even make sense (ASP.NET MVC categorized a language, etc)
I am trying to export pdf using MVC 4. While exporting when trying to embed Html in pdf document error occur:
The type or namespace name 'tool' does not exist in the namespace
'iTextSharp'
I have added iTextSharp.dll but i dont know why i am getting error. Please help me thanks in advance.
...
When returning a object from a method, if the object doesn't exist e.g no record in the database is it normal to return null, or is it better to return a list with 0 count for that object
Ah. If you don't keep up in JS world for about 2 weeks, you're totally a dinosaur that's waaaay behind the facts. On the other hand, if you don't keep up for 2 years in C# you're pretty much up-to-date (but nearing the next big release).
I was recently told by someone that due to the fact that Stack Overflow uses the CC BY-SA 3.0 license any code examples cannot be used in a commercially available closed source application. This individual works for a relatively large international corporation and regularly speaks with lawyers of...
Although, I think there is speculation on your part when you say "If that is the intention there is a problem because the current terms of the site do not support that intent." in your edit, as the terms seem to me to support the reuse of code without license or attribution.
But i do love the question, imo, the copyright extends to the answer or question, not to the individual parts of it. And it would be very difficult for someone to win a legal argument that you stole there code from SO