When is the query in the following code executed? In the first statement or the second statement?
// ***Create a query that, when executed, returns a collection of tasks.
IEnumerable<Task<int>> downloadTasksQuery =
from url in urlList select ProcessURL(url, client, ct);
// ***Use ToList to execute the query and start the tasks.
List<Task<int>> downloadTasks = downloadTasksQuery.ToList();
@Wietlol How does that work? I mean how is the query executed in the second statement when the query is assigned to the variable in the first statement
@Wietlol doesn't IEnumerbale<Task<int>> tasksList = from t in tasks select GiveMeAnInteger(1) mean that tasksList is a collectionm of Task objects, just like how you declare and initialize a List<T>?
IEnumerable is a contract to a stream of things. So when you have your downloadTasksQuery , you didn't enumerated on it yet. In fact you can pipe the stream toward with downloadTasksQuery.Where(...) and still getting an IEnumerable
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@Wietlol in that case is IEnumerable<Task<int>> = from t in tasks select GiveMeAnInteger(1); actually IEnumerable<out collection> = from t in tasks select GiveMeAnInteger(1);, meaning that the result of the query is output to a collection (when ToList() is called) just like int number; int32.TryParse(input, out number); outputs an int value to the variable number if int32.TryParse is true (i.e. parsing the input to an int was successful)?
@Wietlol Compiler guards against accessing values that could be null. I think the default would be everyhing is non-null, unless you use a ?. For example, Person? person could be null but Person person could not be.
TypeScript is code-flow aware. If you have a value that is string | undefined and you do an if (value), then the entire code block knows that the value is string and not undefined. That kind of feature is very nice and you really miss it when it's not there.
That's why C# introduced if (value is Person person) so you could access person.Name then. Even though it should be fully aware that value.Name is valid after the check. But nooo. It's not aware.
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@Wietlol Are you saying that List<string> list = new List<string>(); defines that you load information from memory where as the Enumerable IEnumerable<Task<int>> tasks = from t in tasks select GiveMeAnInteger(1);defines that you load the information from the query from t in tasks select GiveMeAnInteger(1). So `IEnumerable<Task<int>> tasks = <source>. Then IEnumerable.forEach or IEnumerable.ToList load the information from the source which is why the query is executed when you use ToList?
so i have a class that inherits from another both have the same function name. As far as i know from google every nonstatic method is virtual in java.
but when i debug it goes to the parent classes method when i call it and not the child objects that i passed to it.
let me know if you want exact code
in base Page i have
public Page beginAddfile(){
// here to be a virutual method dont use this. use on children
return this;
}
public Page finishAddFile(){
// here to be a virutual method dont use this. use on children
return this;
}
@Wietlol In the following code what's the point of awaiting the completed task assigned to the variable firstFinishedTask when it has already been completed and returned by the method Task.WhenAny() (i.e. there is no Task to wait for because the Task is done)? Why not just use the statement Task<int> result = firstFinishedTask.Result;?
// Identify the first task that completes.
Task<int> firstFinishedTask = await Task.WhenAny(downloadTasks);
// ***Remove the selected task from the list so that you don't
// process it more than once.
downloadTasks.Remove(firstFinishedTask);
// Await the completed task.
int length = await firstFinishedTask;
resultsTextBox.Text += $"\r\nLength of the download: {length}";
where can i find out more info on what this is called, its like shorthand for calling an active element? ((MainWindow)Application.Current.MainWindow).MessagingLabel.Content = message;
I have these 2 simple lines of Windows Form application in C#. I always wondered if it's better to avoid the variable and use the code directly if of course you don't need it anywhere else. What would be the best one between them as not being an opinion since I need to know what would be my cor...
The statement int length = await firstFinishedTask; means that we are awaiting the promise to produce an integer when the task is complete (i.e. we are awaiting what remains in the suspended async method ProcessURL (when its await statement is executed) to be complete before the int that was promised is returned to the variable length).
Question code:
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using System.Text;
using System.Threading.Tasks;
using System.Windows;
using System.Windows.Controls;
using System.Windows.Data;
using System.Windows.Documents;
using System.Windows.Input;
using System.Windows.Media;
using System.Windows.Media.Imaging;
using System.Windows.Navigation;
using System.Windows.Shapes;
// Add a using directive and a reference for System.Net.Http.
using System.Net.Http;
// Add the following using directive.
"There's an update to download" >Update is downlaoded and installed "There's another update to download" >Okay, install that one too "There's another one >Fucking hell, isntall that one too "Done" >Blank screen
I used RtlCompressBuffer to compress a png image.
My problem is when I try to unpack it using RtlDecompressBuffer I get the following output (the image is incomplete).
What is wrong on this side?
Function:
DWORD FinalUncompressedBufferSize;
PBYTE OutputBuffer = PBYTE(LocalAlloc(LPTR, 4096));
...