Angular appears to me to be one of those things that's so hard it doesn't seem worth the time 'getting it', but once you get it it's totally worth it because of how powerful it is.
problem with JS frameworks is if it takes you too long to learn it by the time you master it its too late anyway because something else is now more popular
i'm not real good with the concept of bootstrapping in javascript - which i partially blame on Bootstrap cluttering up my searches for more information
Generics that can be an object or nullable primitive without the >The type 'TValue' must be a non-nullable value type in order to use it as parameter 'T' in the generic type or method 'System.Nullable<T>' error?
I've got a few recruiters after me I just haven't been able to get back to them yet
although I had a bad experience with my last recruiter
I got fired from that job after 2 weeks because they didn't want to train me and they didn't want to pay the recruiter LOL
i'm in this awkward position where I have the basic skills but not all the fancy APIs and stuff people want, but my first job was a braindead coding position
so i'm not quite entry level but not much better ;_;
@ton.yeung when I do where TValue : struct I get compiler errors when I try to use it with non-value types.
This seems silly. I can't be the only person who needs to do this.
Might be more SOLID but less DRY. The logic for either case is exactly the same.
And actually, that wouldn't work. The parameter always needs to be nullable.
I don't see how that solves the problem - it just moves it. (Sorry, I'm not trying to sound like a jerk, I don't understand what you're getting at)
So there's a wrapper object with properties instead of out params
They still need to be generic and still need to be nullable.
There's four possible results here - the search value is found. Then the exact match value is used and high/low bound are null.
The search value is not found but is is within the range of the collection. High and low bound are populated with the next highest and lowest values respectively, exact match is null
Search value is smaller than everything in the collection - high bound is the smallest value, other two are null
And the reverse for search value > than everything in the collection
That's what I'm trying to avoid. As it stands that's the recommended solution. I feel like this isn't that crazy a thing to need to do.
So add a out bool exactMatchFound property to the method
No, I get what you're saying.
Like I said, I just feel like there should be some way for a generic type to hold either nullable value types or reference types. But I guess I'm wrong.