Alright, sorry and my bad for not providing much context (coding in C). so far I am trying to implement a user defined function in a simple calculator. I am using void read_number {}
void read_number1(); void read_number2(); int main() { int count1=0, value=0, number1=0, number2=0, operation=0; printf("Enter the first operand, one digit at a time ... or enter -1 to stop \n"); scanf("%d", &value); while(value != -1) { number1=number1*10+value; // new digit is added to the existing operand count1+=1; printf("Enter the next digit of first number or 0-1 to stop ...\n"); scanf("%d", &value); } printf("the first operand = %d \n",number1);
!~>class A{
static object Main(){ return Generate() == Generate(); }
static string Generate(){
var r = new Random();
var c = new List<char>();
while (c.Count<9){c.Add((char)r.Next(20000,90000));}
return new string(c.ToArray());
}
}
interestingly, though you could find any number in the digits of pi, the longer the number, the bigger the number indicating its position in the digits of pi most likely
so that yes, you could represent all of shakespeare's works in the digits of pi to one position, but that position index would be much much much bigger by comparison
at least statistically
if you're looking for 1415926, then it's position 0
generated a httpclient using NSwag, usually its happy with .Result as shown below
var results = myHttpClient.GetAsync().Result;
but now I am getting
Task' does not contain a definition for 'Result' and no accessible extension method 'Result' accepting a first argument of type 'Task' could be found (are you missing a using directive or an assembly reference?)
I have the following method
public bool HasTypeAttribute<TAttribute, TType>(TType obj)
{
return typeof(TType).GetCustomAttribute<TAttribute>() != null;
}
and I want to be able to use it like this:
MyClass instance = new MyClass();
TypeHelper.HasTypeAttribute<SerializableAttribute>(instan...
> The order of the keys in the Dictionary<TKey,TValue>.KeyCollection is unspecified, but it is the same order as the associated values in the Dictionary<TKey,TValue>.ValueCollection returned by the Values property.
@Shad Think again, what you want to do is look up a definition and find the word for it. Pick up the nearest dictionary and look up "a thing consisting of a number of different and distinct parts or items that are grouped together." and then grab the word that references this data.
Okay, here's the multiple bidirectional version:
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Text;
class BiDictionary<TFirst, TSecond>
{
IDictionary<TFirst, IList<TSecond>> firstToSecond = new Dictionary<TFirst, IList<TSecond>>();
IDictionary<TSecond, IList<TFirst>> sec...
Good: Build second dictionary reversing values into keys and keys into values. Better: Build second dictionary when you build the first. Bad: Perform reverse key lookup each and every time you require to know a value's key.
@Shad go with whatever you think it's right, seems like you've got your mind set on it anyway. But don't ask us when the person that has to maintain that calls your mother names.
@Shad it worked because C# is a highly customized language. it was not a good approach because you defeat the purpose of Dictionary, and iterate trough may cause performance issue
@Shad I was here to answer your question, and provides code that correct, according to your question... but as others said, it was not a good approach. But if your dictionary is not so big, or performance isnt an issue, then it was fine, dont think too much
@LPGTESOFTS Always feel free to ask directly. You don't need to ask if you can ask. If you ask if you can ask you're already asking so you might as well ask.