Well, the lab gave me back my laptop, saying that although it was one of the models recalled, there wasn't actually anything wrong with it. And I still have the temp going up and the fans blasting whenever I do the littlest thing, like open Chrome or VS.
@HéctorÁlvarez I don't know. I worked fine for 6 months, then started acting up recently. It could be all sorts of things - the latest OS update. Enterprise security policy update. General wear and tear.
@Wietlol There wasn't anything out of the ordinary, but it did seem that any app took more CPU than it should. VS would regularly take up 10-15% when idle. Chrome and Firefox both kept taking up 8-9% with very few tabs.
Seems Lenovo's settings app has an "Intelligent Cooling" mode which tries to sense if the laptop's on your, well, lap, and optimizes for cooling, and optimizes for hotness and performance when on a desk.
Don't know how it works, but don't care. Disabling it.
using (var p = new ExcelPackage())
{
//A workbook must have at least on cell, so lets add one...
var ws = p.Workbook.Worksheets.Add("MySheet");
//To set values in the spreadsheet use the Cells indexer.
ws.Cells["A1"].Value = "This is cell A1";
//var xx = p.GetAsByteArray();
using (var memoryStream = new MemoryStream())
{
Response.Clear();
@Wietlol Yeah, temperature I already have tools for that. Statuses is just what's reported by the hardware. Again, already checked that. Nothing suspicious.
if ram is high, you increase your ram, if disk usage is high, you get a faster disk, if network usage is high, get a better network, or network card, or attach via cable instead of wifi, but if it is just cpu that is high, im clueless really
@Xariez I've discovered before that some queries I thought were straightforward were anything but. EF isn't perfect, and sometimes it screws up and creates horrific queries.
Not sure yet, but i'm missing a lot of filters so it's kind of expected. It's just that i'm scared that once all filters are in, the test data will be "too" limited/limiting @LeeButler
he basically wants to convert the input space from the UI which likely looks like this optimaforums.com/forum/attachments/… to the output space which is speaker volume (4 speakers, one in each corner)
I'm starting to think if it's even worth trying to make this SQL query into LINQ anymore or if i should just copy and paste it into some SqlCommand in C#
what I tried is to give the optional rule a continuation rule, which is basically making it if "a" matches, try to match the remaining rule ("b?c?") if not, then move the iterator back and try to match the remaining rule ("b?c?")
but this will fail to do some more... advanced things very quickly
@LeeButler it is a paste.ofcode.org link
I C-sharpenized the code where I could
dont try to compile that shit
but i need some other approach than simply asking the rule if it matches
it works for literal token rules, token type rules (instanceof kind of stuff), a sequence of rules, etc, but will fail on rules like an optional rule (a?), a repeating rule (a+) or other stuff
It's usually more efficient if you don't. Although there are cases where you have to. Like some comparisons or to handle the loadtime at a controlled point.