FONV had the devs of outer worlds. Skyrim and Oblivion were both unfinished and required several years of modders outputting the work that bugthesda declined to do
Well, neither are good, but Hans' at least have consistent color, consistent font without hacks on the middle 2, and also add some extra on the right to compensate for the floating 2 on the left.
I told the agency that let the judgment be from embassy's side. I have read some articles that even though their passport have dried puked on it, it still got accepted
Make sure you get the latest edition of any book you find. The language changes quite a bit, and if yo get a copy from before major milestones like async/await or .NET Core, you'll miss out of a lot of modern concepts and techniques.
@mr5 not exactly; I was just in charge of handling the interfaces that international students/scholars had to go through, but I wasn't required to really know how that works
my boss would tell me what needed to be changed and I would change it
so an element inside a list have a feature to add new row into the list?
why would you need that?
it's 2 different dimension. You have to notify the collection, when the collection is changed (new row/deleted row/ NOT modified row). The other dimension are the elements themself
each row's DataContext is an INotifyPropertyChanged stuff, and may notify the UI on their own
@V.7 it depends. For example I had a property window, where the values came from a WebApi call. It was a dictionary conveniently. I just Binded the ItemsSource to the Dictionary and made an ItemTemplate where a label's Text was bound to the .Key, the EditBox's Text was bound to the .Value
in my example everything was readonly. So I had not to make a new layer of the .Values. Mind that, if you want write back the value changes of the .Values, than the Dictionary must be Dictionary<string, SomeIPropertyChangedStuff>()