So that's why I'm pointing it out, to keep it in mind. You're using a technology that mixes server-side logic and rendering (runat=server tags and asp:* tags) with client-side HTML and CSS. You have to know which is which.
My recommendation, again, is to completely avoid the server-side rendered components (<asp:Whatever>) and use plain HTML and CSS to build your view, but use runat=server for those components you need to interact with on the server.
@d4rk4ng31 Yes. asp:* controls are Webforms controls that are rendered on the server-side and turned into standard HTML controls. The basic ones are pretty 1:1 (asp:Button will be rendered as a <button>, asp:Hyperlink as <a>, etc) but some more complex controls might be rendered as a whole set of HTML elements.
The problem with that is that you have an invisible layer of abstraction. If you do <asp:Button CssClass="myButton">, you're pretty sure that it will turn into a <button class="myButton">, but you're not 100% sure, and with complex controls, you're not sure how the attributes might get mapped to the actual HTML.
Theoretically it will, yes, that's what the abstractions are there for.
But it means you'll have a hell of a time matching your server-side components to client-side CSS and styling. That's always been webforms' weak point.
But also - using abstractions like asp:LoginPage means you're not learning web design, you're learning WebForms-specific abstractions. And that's not good.
Basically, you're gaining experience using a very specific and obsolete framework.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan Hmm... That's right. I need to learn the basics before going for abstraction
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan Okay, this is what I will do. I will entirely use CSS/HTML and only when I learn to create my own web-page, will I use abstraction. How does that sound?
Well, for an assignment, I would suggest doing exactly what the professor asked for. I don't know your school, but I assume that if an assignment asked for a specific framework, then they also taught that framework, and so I would do it just like you were taught in class.
Then I'd go and find better tutorials out there for building web apps.
Blazor is basically the next level of Razor. Blazor has two versions: Serverside and Clientside. Serverside works the same as Razor before: Process and render on the server, give stuff to display to the browser. Clientside is completely new: It compiles everything to DLLs and sends them to the browser, where they get executed by the mono-runtime compiled to WebAssembly, so you can literally run your C# code in the browser.
@Hozuki the Philippines is somewhat like that also. Authorities here are coward af especially for the foreigners. I think we inherit that mentality from USAnians.
Mmm, I tend to remember my code thoroughly. But I easily forget what I had for breakfast, whether or not I did the dishes, if I cleaned up, etc. All the menial tasks immediately forgotten, it's like I have no mental capacity to remember that.
the recent movies I have rewatched more than once as an adult are 3 idiots and Interstellar only. I used to rewatch movies as a dumb kid, but now I'm a little less stupid, I only rewatch it if it's a great movie.
I don't have to for rewatching, I still have several seasons of blacklist to watch, star trek picard, modern family and that's only those I remember right now
Rewatching something is very relaxing, at times. Your brain can turn off and you can just enjoy something you know you enjoy without thinking too much.
@BlackPanther No, nothing is executed, until something enumerates over it.
So I have been trying to understand why the following code logs only the message "Suit Generation" followed by the message "Starting Deck", but does not log the message "Rank Generation"?
My attempt at explaining this behavior is that a query is not executed until its IEnumerable (object) is executed (i.e. until the IEnumerable object it returns is executed). The inner query (i.e. inner from clause) is not logged before the foreach loop because the inner query's IEnumerable (object) is not returned until the outer query (i.e. outer from clause) is enumerated in a foreach loop, ToList(...) etc.
The outer query's IEnumerable object encapsulates the inner query (i.e. the outer query's IEnumerable object encapsulates the code for the inner query).
And that's why only "Starting Deck" and "Suits" are logged. Remember, if my memory is correct, that an IEnumerable object is returned immediately when an IEnumerable returning method is called. However I'm not sure my understanding is correct. Can you shed some light on why the query below produces (if that's the right word) a log message of "Suit Generation" followed by the log message "Starting Deck", but does not log the message "Rank Generation"?
var startingDeck =
(from s in Suits().LogQuery("Suit Generation")
from r in Ranks().LogQuery("Rank Generation")
select new {Suit = s,
Rank = r}).LogQuery("Starting Deck");
May be if someone could convert that startingDeck query into method syntax it would be easier for me to understand why the query logs only the messages "Suit Generation" and "Starting Deck"?
@Wietlol Excellent. I think I see it now. "Suit Generation" is logged because calling it returns an IEnumerable<T> object. "Rank Generation" isn't logged because the SelectMany standard query operator extension method isn't executed until a foreach loop or any other method that calls its GetEnumerator method. Then SelectMany returns an IEnumerable<T> too so the message "StartingDeck" is logged because calling SelectMany returns an IEnumerable<T>.
@Wietlol Thank you, you just answered a question Jon Skeet could not answer (partly because my understanding of IEnumerable at that time was not good so my question was not good either). @Hozuki @Wietlol You can post an answer if you like, and I will accept it.
@Wietlol I'll be honest, when he could not answer my question. I knew then I didn't ask the right question. At least he got me to go back to the drawing board, and learn IEnumerable from Hozuki lol
I'd argue that rep doesn't even represent your skill nor knowledge. It just represents how many upvotes answers have gotten. And simple questions with simple answers get tons of upvotes. Answering complex questions gives you nothing. Maybe one upvote, that's it. So why bother? Rep means exactly nothing because of this.
@Wietlol It would just confuse me, haha. I'll stay away from it. May be when my knowledge of LINQ and IEnumerable is solid I will look at Jon's answer again.
@Hozuki Wow, I can answer that question, and I know very little JavaScript.
Lowest hanging fruit?
When Jon Skeet answered my question, I was thinking "I'm your biggest fan I'll follow you until you love me, papa paparazzi ....", haha. But I guess I shouldn't look too much into rep.
I have a public class Editor with a public class Local with a public bool Save. when I call Save from a windows forms Form.cs it throws cs0120 an objetc reference is required for non static method or property save although non of my classes or fucntiosn are static
what should i do
why should i make my public bool a public static bool
@Wietlol On second thought, I don't think you need parentheses around the whole query, because you are chaining method calls, not writing a query in query syntax.
@Wietlol I mostly understand how to convert that query from query syntax to method syntax, except for the SelectMany method call. SelectMany takes two inputs, and what does it do with them? You mentioned something about "cartesian product" but I'm not familiar with that?
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