I need some help with passing the ListView Tapped Id (which I get from a json).
I populate the listView with an API call to a server:
private async void searchButton_Click(object sender, RoutedEventArgs e)
{
var textFrom = odTextBox.Text;
var textTo = doTextBox.Text...
From the example, it looks like you can call this method once on your list of one million names, and it will iterate through them all using multiple threads instead of sequentially one by one.
Trying to decipher the meaning of the parameters is, well, requiring several cups of coffee, and 90% cacoa dark chocolate at the same time. You feel me?
@KendallFrey "scaled differently" is the key here... from the spec: "The decimal type can represent values ranging from 1.0 × 10−28 to approximately 7.9 × 1028 with 28-29 significant digits"
fyi on my question yesterday with the SQLite DB. My testing device had an old copy of the database stored on it which had a different schema. My app copies a copy of the db to the device the first time it's installed..derp
If you're pushing around a lot of values which do have exact base-10 representations, and you need calculations using those decimals to remain precise, and you're not dividing/multiplying too much, decimal is your boy.
@Wardy This method has three incoming arrays though, on for each part of the name, so it is using an index to pick out the same item in each of the arrays.
Most definitely. It would be preferable to me at least to step back and solve this upstream. Not an option thought. Don't you hate it when that happens?
What seems strange is that the outer loop is multithreaded, so I would't think the inner loop could safely access the pixelData variable.
I mean, how would it know not to redo the same pixels?
Nah, that's just taking them row by row, and then processing each column sequentially within a row.
In my example, I might be able to parallel.for on the first name, and then just reference the middlenames and lastnames at the same index from with the parallelfor loop. But since those names are not passed into parellel.for, I wonder if they'll be available. One way to find out.
but, in general, there's no random access into an enumerable, which means there really is little opportunity for parallelism in any form when using multiple IEnumerable<T> as input, without buffering and heavy CPU work being done
simple concat isn't really enough work to make parallelism pay off typically, anyways
I can call ToList on the arrays, but when using parallel.foreach, there doesn't appear to me a way to know when middle and last names go with the current first name.
Maybe just dividing the list into eight parts, and manually kicking off threads for each would speed things up.
I've started to learn very interesting concept of DI, IoT and related stuff.
I have decided to learn it using simple applicaton, very tiny calculator (only basic functions: add, subtract, multiply & divide), because it's very conveniently to learn any new stuff with elementary application.
So......
> My employer's legal department requires me to declare that every opinion I express on Stack Overflow is also the opinion of the entire company, of every employee, and of the executive management. I am never wrong and am always right.