Just plug in, and it works! Not dependent on some device supporting some new protocol or drm! Also I could technically connect many devices to it if I wanted, and the phone wouldn't even realize!
Throwing an error message, saying that the given node must be xml only and cant contain CDATA elements. What do I call the key for that string? MustBeXmlOnly? NoPureXml?
I would. Why not? It also trains You to name correctly Your exceptions. If You have vague naming habits, and just name it ArithmeticException all of Your exceptions, which are about arithmetics, but You have no clue what to name it correctly, than You are naming Your exceptions wrong
In 20 years we'll just say "Google, code me an app that takes pics and allows you to put instragram-esque filters on it." and tada, you're a developer.
@Metallkiller btw it's correctly named by Kevlin Henney in the article. He mentions, that dropping Exception postfix from the exception classes is not enough. End NullPointerException would be NullPointer (Jaba). So he suggests NullDereferenced.
What are Null Pointer Exceptions (java.lang.NullPointerException) and what causes them?
What methods/tools can be used to determine the cause so that you stop the exception from causing the program to terminate prematurely?
Here's a thought: Don't use null. Use static analysis tools in C# to avoid ever allowing a null to pass into your code. Or upgrade to, say, TypeScript, and enforce strictNonNull.
@Wietlol Error indicates that something expected is really wrong. Something unexpected is always wrong in a program. We have to account for all possibilities, so if we forget one, something's wrong with our applicaiton.
@Metallkiller Which is where Java really outshines C# (and honestly, is the only place where it does): it forces you do think about and deal with all types of exceptions.
Like, my dataextractor parses a txt file into data. But now I have xml with cdata, and it has methods receiving string[] lines of data taken from cdata nodes, to make them into data. I now built them so they can be static. Until yesterday, I built a new Dataextractor() and used the instances methods to parse those lines.
@mark333...333...333 We actually have a framework built around crystal reports, but there is some contextrow getting increased somewhere. Trying to find the crystal reports call for that.
Can I correctly consolidate
if(compNode == null || !compNode.Elements("Server").Any())
?
Not sure if the usual '?' would break something because of the negation.
@Wietlol Without the negation, '?' works perfectly fine: if(myNode?.HasElements) doStuffWith(myNode); if myNode is null, the if reads false. Otherwise it reads HasElements.
but if its null, will it read false because "Its null then 'if' reads false" or will it go "its null so its false, but negate that and 'if' reads true"
by definition, it returns true if and only if refType or SomeNonRefField is null and SomeConstant is null or refType is not null and SomeNonRefField is equal to SomeConstant