@qd0r You noticed this a few days back - if it's passed in the query string (as a GET / URL) it will be mapped appropriately from the start. If you were UrlEncoding a POST param then it would remain encoded
Also, you have to specify "save ressources". What are the ressources for? When they're for comparing hte clients databases, use them. Unused ressources are wasted ressources.
It turns out you can, so long as (a) your service is being hosted in a Web Service (obviously) and (b) you enable AspNetCompatibility mode, as follows:
<system.serviceModel>
<!-- this enables WCF services to access ASP.Net http context -->
<serviceHostingEnvironment a...
@HéctorÁlvarez yeah I assumed so. Let me try explaining then
let's say you have a collection of key-value pairs, like a linked list. Finding a specific key-value pair would involve checking every pair, by iterating over it. That's not very efficient.
But what if we had an array of lists, and some criterion that lets us check only one of the lists?
@HéctorÁlvarez TL;DR version: there is no ordering on the GetHashCode() results, and there are no ordering constraints on how GetHashCode() map to internal buckets. In fact, disorder is introduced on purpose in order to make keys unlikely to map to the same bucket.
Nice, I get this, but I need to see how it works underground
btw some advanced SQL question, I added CDC to one of my tables, I have a CT object pointing at my table, but the function to retrieve the changes wasn't created, any idea why?
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/scripting/javascript/reference/this-statement-javascript "this" statement - i've gone blank, is it just a way of referring to an object without having to type it's name when giving it properties?