@ChristianMatthew that kind of looks like you're mixing up two different features. A local function and a delegate are two different approaches, the fact that they can have similar initialisation syntax isn't really relevant. "Using a lambda" doesn't really describe what you're doing, it's like saying "using classes" without discussing what you're using classes to do. You can return a delegate from a method, add it to a collection and so on which is not valid for a local function.
The other point is that local functions are quite new whereas anonymous delegates have been around a while. I think there is some boring technical reason you can't set an anonymous delegate as var but I can't remember exactly what that is, it's not fundamental per se
@TomW why are you saying a local function/lambda and a delegate are 2 different approaches? the local function/lambda end up creating a delegate under the hood during compile time. per my 1st example I am assuming this is what is going on. example 2 is more of a cluttered way of doing this. Point remains, I can't write the local function without using a delegate in the = format. and I can if I don't use it. I agree that the older anonymous functions is why this is now different
in what manner is writing local/lambda functions preferred 1 or 2
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@ChristianMatthew I don't personally see the point of local functions, I've never used them. I'm not really sure what you're asking though.
If you need a delegate, use a delegate; if you don't, don't?
You can pass a delegate around, use it as an argument to a method, for example. Local functions are private to wherever they are declared. So I suppose that's the answer
Earlier this week I talked about how Your Computer is not a Black Box and I spent time time in TCPView and at the command line exploring open ports on my computer. I was doing this in order to debug an issue with a local DNS server I was playing with, so I thought I'd take a moment and look at that server itself. The Technitium DNS Server is a personal local DNS server (FOSS on GitHub) writte…
Won't that also include questions that have multiple tags and C# is one of them?
@Shad Does this mean you want questions purely of C#, because C# is generally used with/on a technology and questions are generally of those, just search the c# tag and you will find all questions asking to do something using c#, I don't think questions directly of c# syntax exist that much
There is nothing in C# available to let you pass in arbitrary named parameters like this.
You can get close by adding a Dictionary<string, object> parameter, which lets you do something similar but requiring a constructor, the "parameter names" to be strings and some extra braces:
static void M...
//Your code goes here
Console.WriteLine("Hello, world!");
var readedBuffer = new byte[]{ 49};
var decode = System.Text.Encoding.ASCII.GetString(readedBuffer);
Console.WriteLine("decode "+ decode);
I rebuilt the project, and then error messages in vs appeared, I closed all opened docs, then controls (datagridview and buttons ) has deleted from designer, my life is paused right now, and I'm only able to chat
(orthography) A diacritic ( ¨ ) placed over a vowel letter (especially the second of two consecutive ones) indicating that it is sounded separately, usually forming a distinct syllable, as in the English words naïve, Noël and Brontë, the French haïr and the Dutch ruïne.
(linguistics, prosody) The separation of a vowel, often a diphthong, into two distinct syllables.
(prosody) A natural break in rhythm when a word ends at the end of a metrical foot, in a line of verse.
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using System.Text;
using Android.App;
using Android.Content;
using Android.OS;
using Android.Runtime;
using Android.Views;
using Android.Widget;
namespace SGDD_Portal.Model
{
public class ImageFileName
{
public List<string> ImageName { get; set; }
public byte[] ImageBytes { get; set; }
}
}
@zubairz you have to create the list first to be able to add items to it. The error message is telling you that you're trying to add a string to nothing, because the member ImageName has not been assigned a value yet
@ActionHank no need if you return IList - you can add and clear it to your hearts content, but when you have a List and setters you start lose control of, for instance, propertychanged
UTF-1 is one way of transforming ISO 10646/Unicode into a stream of bytes. Its design does not provide self-synchronization, which makes searching for substrings and error recovery difficult. It reuses the ASCII printing characters for multi-byte encodings, making it unsuited for some uses (for instance Unix filenames cannot contain the byte value used for forward slash). UTF-1 is also slow to encode or decode due to its use of division and multiplication by a number which is not a power of 2. Due to these issues, it did not gain acceptance and was quickly replaced by UTF-8.
== Design ==
UTF-1...