If you have a framework on top of your application, that attribute is pre-processed by that framework and most of the time, it modifies the original code or report something in the IDE.
I'm continuing my "Computer Stuff They Didn't Teach You" series on YouTube. Please subscribe! I've set a personal goal to get to 100k subs by Christmas. This episode is very special as it features a Surface Duo *AND* a 1U Rack-Mounted Azure Stack Edge! It's a gentle and clear explanation of cloud computing. This 20 min video talks about the components of a computer, starting with a Raspberry…
paste the permalink only in the message box. to find the permalink, hover on the message and an arrow down icon should appear, click on it then it'll show you the permalink.
Blazor is basically the next level of Razor. Blazor has two versions: Serverside and Clientside. Serverside works the same as Razor before: Process and render on the server, give stuff to display to the browser. Clientside is completely new: It compiles everything to DLLs and sends them to the browser, where they get executed by the mono-runtime compiled to WebAssembly, so you can literally run your C# code in the browser.
while we're at utilizing company's computer, did you guys tried to run a bitcoin/ethereum miner in your company's computer? what might be the legal consequences if you got caught?
Question, if someone messes up the code, and you call them out on it and they immediately fix it and I reply "Thanks", does that sound contrived or sarcastic in any way?
hey guys, is there an easy way in EF /LINQ to use the opposite of select? so normally when you query to get entities, you get the whole entity with all properties. what if I have a large string that I don't want? Ie.
@AnuAravind Well first, ditch the .ToList() everywhere. You don't need it on each call, the last Count() will enumerate it anyway and without the Tolist there is potential for optimizations.
Well. now the block looks like this @Squirrelkiller
for (int week = 0; week < weekList.Count(); week++) { // first, to reduce parsing your weekList EVERY time, get a reference to your start/end dates var wkStart = weekList.ToList()[week]; var wkEnd = wkStart.AddDays(5);
for (int week = 0; week < weekList.Count(); week++) { // first, to reduce parsing your weekList EVERY time, get a reference to your start/end dates var wkStart = weekList.ToList()[week]; var wkEnd = wkStart.AddDays(5);
for (int week = 0; week < weekList.Count(); week++)
{
// first, to reduce parsing your weekList EVERY time, get a reference to your start/end dates
var wkStart = weekList.ToList()[week];
var wkEnd = wkStart.AddDays(5);
var callAttemptsByWeek = crmEventDetails?.Where(e => e.EventCd == (int)CrmEventType.Lead_ContactAttempt &&
e.CreateDate >= wkStart &&
Aim is to get the average calls in a weekly and monthly basis. (No. of call attempts in this week for a lead where the lead created or lead assigned in recent 5days)/ (total no. of leads created. or assigned this week or previous week which has callattempts in recent days)
Anyone broadly familliar with UWP in the house? Trying to trigger events on a child page displayed on a NavigationView, but the root page seems to take precidence
The next big revolution in coding practice might be closer than we think, and it involves helping computers to code themselves. By utilizing natural language processing and neural networks, some researchers think that within a few years we can remove humans entirely from the coding process.
If you work as a coder, you’ll be glad to hear that they are wrong.
I've come to realize the fan in my powermac does not spin
not sure if it's one of those cases where it only starts to spin when the system really needs it, but yeahh -- whenever I open the case, it doesn't spin...just moves a slight bit when booting up
Let's say I have a tuple that looks like this:
(string, string, string) myTuple = ("Poop","Stack","Overflow");
Is there an elegant way to convert this to a list of strings that would look like this?
var myList = new List<string>() { myTuple.Item1, myTuple.Item2, myTuple.Item3 };
I can't ForEach...
I think this question should be re-opened, the dupe target and answer suggests reflection but it's unnecessary and slow, here's a reflection free implementation; I think the dupe should be re-opened too, it doesn't need reflection either