All the Squirrels in this group, did you name squirrel because squirrels are good at traversing trees and branches, and have good knowledge of kernels (Nuts) or just a coinicidence
The use of the _ discard is strange there, since you can simply ignore the return value. You only need it when a return value is expressly required, like in an out param or part of a value tuple.
C# was a play of C++, which in turn was a play off of C, which in turn was a play off of B, which in turn was a play off of BCPL which stood for Basic Combined Programming Language
@Neil It's all a combination of reminiscences of the reminiscence of the first abacus.
The computer, also known as abaception, is a contraption that contains several million abacuses and little people who manage them at lightning speed in order to calculate several hundred billion operations per second.
The only reason why your computer runs slower is because your micro-midgets are slacking.
@Wietlol Probably because the IDE thinks it's a good idea to state that this function returns something and you clearly discarded it instead of disregarding or missing up on this fact.
@HéctorÁlvarez I saw the same in Reddit and asked the question here as well, but this was a recent post and I was trying to find out if this is an old joke or a new one since squirrels have been here before O joined
@HéctorÁlvarez A Task that isn't observed - like one that is returned from a PostAsync() function but not assigned to any variable and not awaited - will have its exceptions unhandled - you'll have to catch the UnobservedTaskException on the TaskScheduler to catch it.
The compiler warns you about that. But if you assign the Task to a variable, any variable, the compiler says "Ok, you know there's a Task here, you assigned it to something, it's up to you from now on", and removes the warning.
I have 1 long running process which has 2 steps like below:
1) Transformation
2) Versioning Management
So once Step1 is completed, Step2 is executed.
Now for 2nd step execution, I have done lazy loading for Versioning like below:
public sealed class VariantProcessor
{
private readonly ...
@ILoveStackoverflow Not sure what the question is. It looks like the Lazy bit is a tiny part of the whole code you posted, so it's not clear exactly what you're asking and whether it's not mostly just noise.
You just pasted a lot of code, asking "is this code wrong", without actually saying what your problem is, what doesn't work, or why you suspect a problem.
@ILoveStackoverflow So what's the problem? You're delaying the creation of an EntityVersion instance until after _transform() has completed. Does it make a difference? I don't know. I don't know if EntityVersion has a heavy constructor thta does a lot of work. If it doesn't, it won't make much difference.