Alcohol abuse is a very common problem among young people these days. Just because your peers are drinking heavily doesn't mean you need to drink heavily yourself.
one time i chugged a bottle of wine, i woke up with all sorts of fast food wrappers in my bed and i don't even remember being in my car, let alone driving to get food. I haven't drank wine since. that is scarey shit, i could have killed somebody, or myself, and i don't know how i didn't
Wholeheartedly disagree - if you regularly drink heavily for no good reason, you can build tolerance for those times where there's a big party and it's very tempting to overdo it - remain in control for the good times :D
What are branches? OK, this is an overly broad question. Let me rephrase. Imagine I have a single text file. When I create a new branch in TFS 2010, does it create a complete new copy of the file? Is this even a right question to ask? Should I leave TFS internals to the pros?
@kush pretty sure it creates new files, thats the point of branches, so you can edit different versions of the same file and not have them interfere with eachother
@kush i assume so yes. I don't see how you can have multiple branches with the same files, it doesn't make sense -- unless TFS stored them in memory, but thats a really really dumb idea and i'm 100% positive TFS doesn't
well, i guess it depends on your definiton of really big, i don't think it'll fill up a hard drive easily (not unless you literally had a few thousand projects with a hundred branches each or something)
oh, that works i guess. normally when i get to a stable position, i just check it back in, then check it out again, and if i mess up i can just undo pending changes
shelving is really for having two versions of the same branch, like if you do a bunch of work on a branch, and they decide they don't want you to work on that anymore but want you to work on something thats "broken" in the same branch, shelve it, then undo pending changes, check out again, and you have your previous changes backed up, but can work on another version of the same branch
if you create a list of type object, and add a bunch of elements of type ItemType, when you pull the elements out of the list, you'll have to cast to ItemType to use them as type ItemType
that's the common base type of all the items in the inventory, so you can create a List<BaseType> and every item brought out of it is guaranteed to have that behaviour
and HAS-in-common-with is like... all items in a grocery store has a "get price" method, because you call that when you ring them up, so they all implement an interface
so understanding those three you can either program to a base class, or to an interface and use polymorphism so you don't have to box to type object and cast when you pull em out
another thought...if there is little or no behaviour in common between all the types in the inventory, what is the value of putting them in a list? If whatever's accessing that list needs to do something with Foods, then perhaps all Foods should be kept together in a List<Food> and the other types should be somewhere else. Maybe that means having to write some boring boilerplate to keep collections synchronised, wouldn't gurantee against it.
I need to measure the frequency of visits at different places per day, week, month in C#. I have user databases that contain place names for user as shown below.
User-1
place date
dinning hole 04-04-2012-1pm
Walmart 04-04-2012-3pm
Home 04-04-2012-8pm
User-2
place date
Home 04-04-2012-8am
dinning hole 04-04-2012-1pm
Gas Station 04-04-2012-2pm
Walmart 04-04-2012-3pm
I am kind of confused , Could you please make it clear to me ? What is actually being asked ? Any co…
@CoKoder Put it this way; Management wants a report on behaviour of potential customers. They know where these potential customers go at which times. Now they want to know where and when they should be handing out ads to reach as many customers as possible. Does that help? :P
Currently on my ASP.NET website when I define a new user I write their data to a .txt file like this:
public class User
{
public string UserName;
public string PassWord;
public string Email;
public string FirstName;
public string LastName;
public string Twitter;
public string FaceBook;
public in...
You can never rely on hiding anything, imagine your code being open source, which it is for an attacker. Then ensure that they can't get their hands on it.
for (int i = 0; i < splited.Length; i++) { Console.WriteLine(splitstring[i] + " "); /*if I enter hello world, * output is * h * e * * Why does it do this?*/ }
Just to explain my ignorance. I have 1 and 1/2 years of experience working with programming, just left high school and my boss just tells me to do weird stuff that I don't know.
So, bear with me.
I didn't put any relations on the LINQ query because I'm just filtering the data.
That is why the first step is going to be to establish the top. This is the top I am assuming:
var top = from contaRow in dtMenuDinamico.AsEnumerable()
where contaRow.Field<int?>("IdPai" == null)
select new
{
IdMenu = contaRow.Field<int>("IdMenu"),
Nome = contaRow.Field<string>("Nome"),
IdPai = contaRow.Field<int?>("IdPai"),
Ordem = contaRow.Field<int?>("Ordem"),
Now you have all children for that particular parent ID. For every element you're looking for, you look to see if there are any children with that parent ID.
@LewsTherin Is right though. DT are not good for recursion (it can be done, but it's ugly).
DataRow thisRow = dtMenuDinamico.Rows.Find(x); will give you the current datarow for the given MenuID. You need to check to see if it's null (in which case it's a root) and handle it differently.
Also, if there are no children for a particular MenuID, then I don't think you should be creating another <ul> tag, so before writing it, check to see if there are any children for that ID.