public List<Data> DataList = new List<Data>();
public class Data
{
public List<StockDataTable> StockDataList { get; set; }
public List<P2Table> P2DataList { get; set; }
public List<BarTable> BarDataList { get; set; }
}
To access the properties of an object without knowing the names of those properties you can use a for ... in loop:
for(key in data) {
if(data.hasOwnProperty(key)) {
var value = data[key];
//do something with value;
}
}
In ES2017 you can use Object.values():
Object.values(data)
At the time of writing support is limited (FireFox and Chrome).All major browsers except IE support this now.
In ES2015 you can use this:
Object.keys(data).map(k => data[k])
What happens if someone passes in MyOtherClass to your action?
Let's say, you have an Action<string> and you want to upcast it to Action<object> - what happens if someone passes in an int, which is a valid object but not a valid string?
You can't safely upcast it, which is why it doesn't let you upcast it. You can wrap it:
Action<IMyInterface> upcast = (IMyInterface obj) => { if (obj is MyClass) downcast(obj as MyClass) };
But if you don't have a SELECT, you're returning a list of StockDatas. Because nothing in what you're written tells it to return anything but StockDatas.
So you need the Select to project each StockData into the calculated values.
1. Take the list of StockDatas. 2. Filter our those that don't match the criteria. 3. From the filtered list, calculate the value. 4. For the calculated values, sort.
Yes, because you're simply not reading the error message.
Errors like "no overload takes 0 arguments" mean you need to go to the method's documentation to see what parameters it expects.
List.Sort() takes no arguments and attempts to sort by the items' default sorting, but OrderBy doesn't, and requires you to specify the sort explicitly. It's clear to see when you check out the method signature and docs.
Sure, x => x seems a bit pointless, but it's clearly a subset of x => <whatever>, which is a common scenario.
It's raining like mad. Apparently the battery is flat. Which is interesting because it had >100mi range left yesterday, and as far as I know it hasn't taken itself for a wander
They released a patch for the new Macbooks and their serious thermal throttling issues to calm the power management system whioch was going a bit crazy. This improved performance in most video production software. Except Apple's own Final Cut Pro, which now actually performs worse
People would be less angry if they weren't suggesting the (largely underpowered) systems with stupid features like the touch bar weren't targeted at professionals
Ok, Lenovo service got back to me. Seems the fix is simple - either fasten the unruly screw that's messing up the battery, or (if it's already damaged the battery), replacing the battery. Free, of course, since it's a recall. Means there's no need to back up everything.
Problem is, because I bought it in the US, my warranty doesn't include client-site support, so I have to drive over to their lab to fix it.
I have a 1920x1080 display. Working area is 1920x1040 (because of the taskbar). I give this value to the Resize operation, and it comes out as 1029 pixels, not 1040.
I've noticed there's a bug where the "bounds" of the window are slightly further out than the real edge. Imagine if the window had the border that Windows 7/8 had around the edge
DWM still things the border is that big, just with a single pixel width drawn and the rest empty.
I'm not sure it applies to maximised windows though
I have to do it externally - UWP doesn't give you the option of determining the Window's size or position, so I have to pass the window handle to an external process and do it there.
It's fragile but it should work. I think they left it for compatibility reasons, because if the bounds changed, windows that looked right in 7 & 8 would look weird in 10
@LeeButler I'm checking out System.Windows.Forms.VisualStyle.VisualStyleInformation. If that doesn't pan out, I'll try the Win32 calls. I have plenty of those already in this class.
@Wietlol They're all active projects which depend on the "Framework" project, which I'm currently refactoring
That project contains the first 2 years of me learning how to code in an Object oriented way. As a result, it's full of a lot of undocumented and horrific code
It's also incredibly business critical, but it also performs like crap
I know. I started working on improving our main inventory control software last week while waiting for somebody to do something, optimised a few bits here and there and knocked out most of the delays, and did 50%+ performance improvements across the board
Some areas got improvements up to 95%
There's a lot of poorly written code still in there, but I couldn't find a way of making it better, so some parts of the application I'm gonna have to start new, but I've been having so much fun doing it
Like for instance, I've just found a notificon in the framework library which fires up every time somebody uses a skucollection (an essential feature of out system) and doesn't even show up
Skucollections are used a lot, and in some instances hundreds of times per seconf
var left = leftScreen.Left - Windows10InvisibleBorderSize;
var top = leftScreen.Top;
var width = rightScreen.Right - leftScreen.Left + Windows10InvisibleBorderSize * 2;
var height = rightScreen.Bottom - leftScreen.Top + Windows10InvisibleBorderSize;