C:\>If you're happy and you know it, syntax error! Syntax error
C:\>If you're happy and you know it, syntax error! Syntax error
C:\>If you're happy and you know it, then you really ought to show it. If you're happy and you know it, syntax error! Syntax error -- widom spoken by @Neil
i have a dictionnary i receive and i need to apply transformations before sending it to the DB for example X:false but needs to be X:0 in the DB this is just a simple example is there a way to do this easily?
which is to say, red and blue have to be low and green has to be high
if I told you I got the averages of all red green and blue values, and told you they were 50% 51% and 52%, could you tell me with any confidence how blue the image is?
it has blue, but it could also be mixed in with red or green
so the image itself may not have royal blue color in it
oh yeah and this was after they made me take some political test that said I was like 83% socialist, 14% republican, 80% green, and a few others; basically after that one of them unironically said I should be executed
a socialist is someone who believes the government should be heavily involved in economic concerns, including employment (most working citizens would work for the government, in other words)
because the republican party in my country constantly calls itself the "party of small government" despite wanting to put sanctions in place that would prevent freedom of expression
like how Trump wants to eliminate freedom of the press because the media hurts his feelings
or how my former governor (and now VP) tried to pass a law that would allow business owners to deny service to lgbt people based on the owners' religion
@juanvan found a way to change the directory index without affecting network by changing the order of operation; went from copy to new location and rename to move with a rename flag does the same but take much more less resource
Why is it that when talking to a non-programmer it's like pulling teeth to get (what I think is a) simple question answered about a single point of logic of how a process is supposed to work. I explain it again and again in the simplest terms I can think of but they don't understand what I'm talking about. And these are the people that decided how it's supposed to work! Did learning programming turn me into a fucking alien or something?
@AlRey Speaking as an American, yes. The US is fucking stupid.
@AlRey. Hitler. Hitler, who put gay people in death camps. They said your grandpa was like that Hitler for saying companies shouldn't be allowed to deny service to gay people.
Hello! This might be a bit of a weird question, but I really don't know how to search for it and thought maybe someone could help me with it. Is there a hashing algorithm that will have a unique result for 0? I have multiple blocks of 4096 bytes each, and I want to determine as quickly as possible if one of them is only zeros, and I thought that a hash would be faster than actually checking every byte on its own.
Yes, but I was interested if there was some algorithm that guaranteed that only 0 could produce a certain hash. Otherwise I would have to check every byte to avoid collisions. It's of course better than nothing, but I was just curious if such a thing exists.
Not really, because I am not hashing for security purposes
I am only hashing so I can quickly get a result. As opposed to having to check every single byte, I can hash it and only check the resulting hash, which is considerably faster
That totally depends on how far you want to go. I actually just implemented hiding my dbcontext behind an interface too, finding an actually ncie solution. If you advance that one, you could even hide the entities behind interfaces, I guess. Just a sec lemme get some screenshots.
So basically in the COnfigureServices, I first put the dbcontext in the DI by using the method supplied by EntityFramework itself, and then I "add another implementation" to the servicecollection, but tell it to basically get the dbcontext and return that:
I wanted to not reference the db stuff in my domain service, so I had to find a way to put an interface on the dbcontext.
This is my dbcontext:
Basically I only show the Shared types to the outside
You could do the same with your tables: keep the db stuff within, and only show your interface types to the outside
Although I do have to voice a concern: What do you mean with a common class that splits into more tables? This sounds a lot like unclean DB design.
(Disregard the ChangeTracker/Notifier action in the factory method, I'm trying out some stuff here)
My boss has a warped idea of how long things take. She thinks simple things will take a long time, and she thinks complex things will take a short time.
Ok here's mine: There's a table 'Teams'. A Team has an 'Owner', which is a 'Player'. The property Owner in the Team is an int, linking to the Owner's Id:
"Unable to determine the relationship represented by navigation property 'DivUser.UserClaims' of type 'ICollection<DivUserClaim>'. Either manually configure the relationship, or ignore this property using the '[NotMapped]' attribute or by using 'EntityTypeBuilder.Ignore' in 'OnModelCreating'."