This is one of those "Did you know you could do THAT?" Many folks have figured out that C#/F#/.NET is cross-platform and open0source and runs on basically any operating system. People are using it to create micro services, web sites, and webAPI's all over. Not to mention iPhone/Android apps with Xamarin and video games with Unity and MonoGame. But what about cross platform UIs? While not of…
I've just dropped on this MVC project using Razor, and the first time I boot up it throws this: String was not recognized as a valid Boolean on the Html.BeginForm line, but the exception doesn't even say what parameter was supposed to be a boolean.
@using (Html.BeginForm("Login", "Account", new { ReturnUrl = ViewBag.ReturnUrl }, FormMethod.Post, new { @class = "form-horizontal", role = "form" }))
it doesn't even look like something had to be boolean, the model has one boolean but its value is false right now.
There are also 2 string types, 1 ìnt and 1 Dictionary<int,string> all far from a boolean
GitHub has been proven able to dismantle a massive DDoS in 10 minutes too. Not saying that Bitbucket can't though, but it's uncertain.
Oh awesome it's some sort of ghastly error here, the VM is fine (I initialized everything before returning the view) but the error pops at the form begin...
I was looking for an element in the list and expecting it to be found at the end of it. I happen to use the First instead of Last for IDK reason but it is working
@mr5 I've never used Last() for one reason, and it's because you'll have to dump it all in memory before retrieving it. First() implies a scalar result, and I think it should be much faster than retrieving a list of results and taking the last, instead of sorting it upside-down and retrieving the first result.
.Last doesn't necessarily mean dumping it all into memory. It depends entirely on how the IEnumerable/IQueryable provider is implemented.
i.e. I would assume that if it's implemented, the EF framework will likely translate it into performant SQL
and even with IEnumerables, it shouldn't dump it all into memory. It might have to iterate through the entire collection, but that doesn't mean it'll contain the entire enumerable in memory.
In any case, I will usually (if not always) try to retrieve the first result I need given my filter conditions. I feel like I'm more in control when the top item is the exact result that I need, instead of getting a list of items where I have to think if it's the first, the last, the average, or the one in the middle that I need.
Phonetics (pronounced ) is a branch of linguistics that studies the sounds of human speech, or—in the case of sign languages—the equivalent aspects of sign. It is concerned with the physical properties of speech sounds or signs (phones): their physiological production, acoustic properties, auditory perception, and neurophysiological status. Phonology, on the other hand, is concerned with the abstract, grammatical characterization of systems of sounds or signs.
In the case of oral languages, phonetics has three basic areas of study:
Articulatory phonetics: the study of the organs of speech and their...
Choose one: continue from breakpoint, or rerun. COntinue from breakpoint = break, then continue. Data still there. Rerun = kill applicaiton, restart application.
Morning. Bit perplexed by a linq query I've got which is returning something - i.e. it isn't null - but any operation on the return (count() ... toList() ... anything) gives a "object reference not set" error. Don't recall seeing this before?
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan Developing yesterday's talk about degrees and papers, looks like I can't sign docs if I don't have a paper that says I'm an engineer. I.e. I'm supposed to be unable to understand a system and certify whether it works or not if I don't attend college.
You can acknowledge a person who's been certified as "Engineer" has some basics on project management, there's nothing to deny on that, but there's a huge line between assuming someone has a degree of proficiency and assuming someone is totally unable to learn without a teacher and tests.
I use ApexSQL Refactor a lot. One click and it formats your code according to your own template or anything that complies with Microsoft's standard, or whatever you need really.
Limbo is a programming language for writing distributed systems and is the language used to write applications for the Inferno operating system. It was designed at Bell Labs by Sean Dorward, Phil Winterbottom, and Rob Pike.
The Limbo compiler generates architecture-independent object code which is then interpreted by the Dis virtual machine or compiled just before runtime to improve performance. Therefore all Limbo applications are completely portable across all Inferno platforms.
Limbo's approach to concurrency was inspired by Hoare's communicating sequential processes (CSP), as implemented and...