Sorry @everyone, being an internet curmudgeon, I'll leave it at that, but I won't charge if you choose to quote my announcement at regular intervals :)
hey we no longer have the most users out of all the chat rooms did someone start telling bad jokes?
does anyone know if there is a word that describes the syntax of C#, JS, Java, C/C++, Actionscript... you know how they all have slightly similar syntax rules... is there a word for that?
how do you get people to understand that just because a feature is simple and looks simple, maybe it's only a new checkbox for example as far as the user is concerned, that doesn't mean it's simple to make... "What, 6 hours? How could it take that long to make?"
so on my asp.net webforms (ugh!) site, i've got a panel with a text input and button in it. DefaultButton on the panel is set to the button. if i type in text and hit enter, postback occurs but Request.Form is empty and the page reloads with the input cleared. if i type in text and click the button, click event fires as expected and the data is handled.
i've got a page_load handler and the button_click handler. page_load always fires, but if i hit enter then with a breakpoint in page_load i can see that request.form is empty, and thus the click event handler doesn't fire
@Tom: an IEnumerable is not in general a sequence of storage locations. It's possible for an IEnumerable to give you values that you will never see again, so it does not really make sense to mutate them before getting them out of the IEnumerable.
Yeah, not sure. I think because they didn't like the idea of including a naturally side-effecting operation in their mostly (visible) side effect free Linq library
am I a douche for finding it incredibly annoying when going through my coworkers code and finding a massive like 100 line block of code that is just commented out, instead of deleted?
yeah they need to at least put a hook in there to something in reality.. like a fogbugz case number, or something so it actually gets assigned to someone
but it should not be an excuse to do such thing, if you know a better alternative then either implement it or mention the alternative and the reason why that was not implemented
Whenever I think I might not need something I tend to comment it out and assign a //TODO task for it, just to remind me that it's there and I'll eventually need to decide what to do with it. <3 Visual Studio ;0
Nice, I just thought I could drastically reduce the amount of code I need to write by simply putting "//TODO Implement later" in void main() . Not very productive but an awesome timesaver.
I have an application that has a WinForm(myForm).
In that WinForm there are a WPF UserControl(myWPF).
In that WPF UserControl there are a WinForm UserControl(myWinCtrl).
The myWinCtrl has a custom WinGrid(myWinGrid).
myWinGrid does internally a this.FindForm() and.... does not find myForm......
I have this table of 'items' and you can make a copy of them, when you make a copy it becomes an item just like any other, the only difference is that it has a field that shows the ID of the original
as well as a userID to go with it
when i pull back all the items for said userID, i want to exclude the originals that were now copied
so some how i want to remove all items from the IQueryable whose IDs appear in the originalID field of any item in the list... so confusing i know... i would not have made it this way if it were up to me
but only if the current user is the one that made the copy
hey guys, you know how you can do a SQL query where you say NOT IN (another query) or something like that, does anyone know the equivelant in LINQ to SQL?
i am trying to compare an ID and make sure it does not appear anywhere in another whole list of items
Any improvements for this? I think it should be doable as a single query with no subselects: select lastwrite, lastquery from writings where lastquery in (select max(lastquery) from writings where name = 'foo' group by name)