"A user will not be able to perform a switch if the selected user is currently active."
does the sentence above make sense?
OR
"A user will not be able to perform a user switch if the selected user is currently active."
Suppose there's a row of users. Tapping this row will execute a process called User Switch. First, there will be a validation. If the validation fails, it will not perform the actual process, otherwise, it will happily proceed.
@mr5 Well, that's an example of a program which redefines concepts rather than the other way around
it would have been more straightforward to have a collection of profiles
But now that people understand the concept, it makes it easier used in other contexts
The classic example used is that of the file and the folder. Its usage is probably more used in the context of a computer than it is in real life nowadays
If you wanted to talk about a logical grouping of things, by calling it a folder, everyone knows what you mean, even if it isn't necessarily a folder of files on the hard drive
If you called it Sporgles, then you'd have to explain to every new user what a Sporgle is and how it logically groups a collection of items
so i got a question. I need to retrieve a specific values from a deeply nested json response. I am asking for it directly, something alongside this line: json[0]["senpai"][2]["why don't][3]["you love me :("]. The info i require is always in this specific place but this is a bit messy
Hi all, what's the best practice to write a simple cache? Lazy initialization would have been ideal but it doesn't support time expiration. Also, it has to support async/await so normal lock(...) isn't an option
I agree with the other commenters that you probably shouldn't touch Lazy at all. Lazy isn't very complicated if you ignore the multiple thread-safety options, so just implement it from scratch.
I quite like the idea by the way, although I don't know if I'd be comfortable using it as a general pu...
@DoubleTrouble So write a timestamp indicating last time you retrieved the data
If it gets requested again, and you have it cached in a weak reference and timestamp has not exceeded 5 minutes since last retrieval, give them that version. Otherwise fetcch
No need to have an automatic cache cleaning mechanism
Especially if you don't think memory won't be an issue
hey guys, I have a problem with my rest api - i have a method that takes json as parameter: public object Whatever([FromBody]Newtonsoft.Json.Linq.JObject json) and it works well, but when json contains polish signs it becomes null, any idea what to do with it?
> Mike the Llama is the company's mascot; this is frequently referred to in promotional material (especially for Winamp) citing llamas. Frankel introduced the llama in Winamp's startup sound clip, inspired by the lyrics of Wesley Willis: "Winamp, it really whips the llama's ass!"[1]
ı just wanna learn how to connect db in c# without using connetionString = @"Data Source=WIN-50GP30FGO75;Initial Catalog=Demodb;User ID=sa;Password=demol23";
@Neil Oracle's system is way too complicated for most apps, that don't need a machine-wide registry of connections.
But even if you use it, it's just a mechanism for retrieving a connection string. You still don't want an explicit user and password to be a part of it.
The basic .NET way of storing a connection string by name in your app.config/web.config and retrieving it at runtime is the same, logically - you ask for "MyServerConnectionString" and get it, opaquely, with optional encryption at the storage level.
By the way, I was thinking about building a small app about something that piques my interest. The problem is this kind of idea comes after some situation such as "Why is this shit not accounted for?" or the likes of it... and currently I have none of those situations.
therefore, you either make a program because you want to see it done exactly the way you like, or because you're interested in trying your hand at making a program
I wanted a playlist manager for a party, to allow people to add songs to the playlist queue. There are all sorts of similar apps out there, but they either a) allowed users to remove or reorder the queue (which I didn't want) or they let the user add any song they wanted from Spotify (which I didn't want either).
So I whipped up something barebones and basic, but which did the job - read a folder full of MP3s, let the users drag from that list to the queue, and a basic player. Worked fine.
@Neil More like a planner. Some place where you could easily see your available/allotted time, and could sneak hours in between so everything could be moved around smartly
I had a "manager mode" to skip tracks or remove from the queue (with a keyboard shortcut), and the top request (by my wife, the primary client :)) is to be able to rearrange the order if she wanted to.
@HéctorÁlvarez You might not want to let any guest add any old song they want. What if they choose to add a down-tempo song and bum out everyone dancing?
@HéctorÁlvarez That would A) require me or my wife to be actively DJing, which we didn't want to. And B) people really enjoyed being able to pick out songs for the playlist. It was a thing.
@Neil I thought of how to get connectivity. One option is to have the jukebox laptop use its wifi as an access point, and anyone who wanted to connect would have to connect to the dedicated network.
Went and bought some new speakers for the office, since I took my old bluetooth speaker home. Ended up getting a 2.1 system, so, of course, I'm checking out the subwoofer with Seven Nation Army.
@Wietlol Manually, so probably make a foreach with yield return and a few lists for caching
cuz when you wanna go .GetNextPositive you gotta enumerate until you find a positive, and therefore cache the negatives
well or just enumerate the whole thing into lists
@HéctorÁlvarez You could start a repo in our chat's org under a working name and start by building the foundation that lets you connect multiple devices between each other
I mean if we connect through bluetooth, or if we do so through internet, or Wifi, or whatever, and make a generic approach without knowing the details I'll be back the next day to modify what I did so it works better for each case.
I'd personally sort the list and iterate from negative until zero, cut until this position to a variable, then cut until positive and add to the zeries variable, skip the rest because those are positive.
Unless you care about order.
Hah fun, I created a new project and I already have an error stating App() isn't referenced.
@HéctorÁlvarez How about a simple general thingy connecting multiple devices 1) in a wifi or 2) in a wifi made by one of the devices and 3) broadcasting messages to every connected device
That would also work, but we'd have to request permission to enable and disable wifi.
Then again, I still don't know the best solution for that problem. Maybe wifi is the most reliable, bluetooth is pretty lossy... but how good is the hotspot?