I'm having an issue retrieving an object from a hastable using the key assigned to that object. I have an Address object that has a property address which is a placeholder for a hashtable holding the objects Line1, Line2, etc. that are added to the Hashtable collection in their constructors.
All objects have a toString method but when I try to retrieve the Line1 object from the Program.cs class using the key "line1" that is set in the constructor of the Line1 object by using the statement: Console.WriteLine("Address line 1: " + address.address["line1"].ToString());instead of printing the string representation of the Line1 object it prints the namespace followed by the class name i.e. outputs "Address line 1: AddressClasses.Line1". What is causing this (unexpected) behavior?
The Big Mac Index is published by The Economist as an informal way of measuring the purchasing power parity (PPP) between two currencies and provides a test of the extent to which market exchange rates result in goods costing the same in different countries. It "seeks to make exchange-rate theory a bit more digestible."The index, created in 1986, takes its name from the Big Mac, a hamburger sold at McDonald's restaurants.
== Overview ==
The Big Mac index was introduced in The Economist in September 1986 by Pam Woodall as a semi-humorous illustration of PPP and has been published by that p...
I'm having an issue retrieving an object from a hastable using the key assigned to that object. I have an Address object that has a property address which is a placeholder for a hashtable holding the objects Line1, Line2, etc. that are added to the Hashtable collection in the Address object constructors.
All objects have a toString method but when I try to retrieve the Line1 object from the Program.cs class using the key "line1" that is set in the constructor of the Line1 object by using the statement: Console.WriteLine("Address line 1: " + address.address["line1"].ToString());instead of printing the string representation of the Line1 object it prints the namespace followed by the class name i.e. outputs "Address line 1: AddressClasses.Line1". What is causing this (unexpected) behavior?
@MyWrathAcademia Debug it. Simplify first. Split the retrieval of that object and the console writeline. Check what type the object really is. Call tostring on it and step into to see if your custom func is actually called.
@MyWrathAcademia Look at the link I sent ya. Get familiar with it. It's your most powerful tool in development which allows you to see everything that's going in step-by-step.
@MyWrathAcademia I'm not going to tell you. Not to be mean, but to force you to get to be familiar with the debugger. It'll show you. Trust me on that one. :-)
Byte data does not have an 'original data'. It is the exact data. If you mean, what would be the length of the byte data was read as a utf-8 string, then use a convert and get the length.
no, I want to get the .Length of a string but it was converted to a byte[] using Encoding.Default.GetBytes and now all I have is the value from GetBytres (IE a byte[])
How expensive is that call? Would is be better to just call a WriteShort with the length of the string instead of adding this into the WriteBytes method I have?
Then you are not designing a packet structure, you have to stick to their spec. Don't ask whether you should add things to a packet or not, it makes no sense, because you can't decide.
No. I work in an extremely flat organization, there's very little 'pleasing the boss' going on. No need to force anything. Jokes are situational, and honestly, my boss is pretty funny most of those times.
Also if you want some newest fashion trendy , you can do one day visit to my company, I know a lot of beautiful girls here, that's what our bussines process work anyway
one of the last times I went on CS:GO, someone said "n***er" for no reason and then everyone decided to vote to kick me out cause they're retarded and thought I was the one who said it
Source is eh....they still got people, but not much