@Zarenor I eventually found myself developing a theorem for detecting a cycle. It's proof has an equivalence of sorts with the program I ended up writing
@pluto20010 Your application has a single config file. For ASP.NET apps, it's web.config. For desktop/consoel apps, it's app.config that's then compiled to MyApplication.exe.config.
Generics do seem to have caught on, though, pretty universally. Which is nice, considering people born when generics were added to C# will be having their Bar Mitzvahs this year.
Given a choice between inhering/containing ArrayList and adding type-specific Add/Get methods, and simply using the default ArrayList and casting back and forth, guess what everyone did.
I remember my thought processes in 2005 going from "Generics? So what? It just saves a bunch of casting and runtime checks" to "Generics! It saves casting and runtime checks!"
And then progressing to "Holy shit, the Curiously Repeating Template Pattern is blowing my mind".
Yes. Just don't have an ERD right now and need some overview^^
Todays challenge: Build a function to delete an entry from the database. Meaning, I have to remove all entries from ~8 tables referencing that entry and only that entry. Not too complicated, but easier when I have an overview.
when you defined foreign keys, you should be able to state what should happen if the 'parent' entity is deleted - either 'leave this orphaned record', 'don't allow the deletion' or 'delete me, too'
in theory, yeah. I can't say I've used it much, but it's definitely possible.
sounds to me like an imperfect situation. My preference would be to just hide the button, but ensure that it doesn't work if the user has no privileges.
I'm trying to do a take on an IQueryable statement. So items.Take(10)..
If say there are only 6 items in total, I still want 4 concated on to the end to make 10.
I've tried a bunch of combinations but not really having any luck
Has anyone else done this ? I must keep it IQueryable and must be able to translate into sql
I can't make a List of 4 nulls and then concat them to the end. That doesn't work
I've tried to find a .TakeOrDefault method, there's only IEnumerable extensions out there, which again can't be translated to the database and therefore fall over
FYI The first line of the Poland National Anthem loosly translate into "Noch stehen wir, noch sind wir nicht untergegangen" "We are still standing, we havn't gone down yet" If i am not mistaken
@Nerdintraining'questionmark' meh, it's not as dramatic as I made it sound. We just split, haven't spoken since. I met the girl who was to be my wife shortly afterwards, moved to Switzerland with her later that year.
@HéctorÁlvarez why not just a normal if statement?
Baisically: commit = check in changes locally. Do often. push = check in changes server for evryone. Do only when no errors are thrown and works, so not that often. clone = copy that reposiroty repository ~ directory with files
@pluto20010 one more thing - work with the command line git, not the GUI (at least when starting out). That way you will actually see what is going on.
Things with "valid" pronouciation like konsonant-vowel-konsonant-vowel etc I usually pronounce like a word (asax), others lettter-by-letter (asp, html), and others by branding (SQL = "sequel", but only when used in a full sentence).