I dont really follow the debates, but I wouldnt be surprised if Trump made at least one personal "attack" or insult to another person during each of the debates
I can understand that perhaps interrupting Biden repeatedly during the debates could be a strat for making him fumble, but that has a serious risk to backfire and make him look like the grade school bully
He's not exactly helping that image by insulting Biden either
@Squirrelintraining I see it the same way that Mac aggressively pushes you towards Safari and App Store, how Linux distributions come with recommended packages at upgrades, how Android shoves down apps your throat, and how iOS doesn't even allow anything the company doesn't want.
... Not to say it's good, but it feels less bad than others.
I want to improve my Entity Framework knowledge and thougt about creating a TrafficSimulator. :) But do I really need a DB for simulating cars, bicycles (position and velocity)?
:D
@Wietlol If everything would be so easy. Problem.JustSolveIt()
They're two entirely different aspects of the program. So like every aspect of a program, don't complicate things needlessly and focus on one at a time
now that our 3rd child is born, there are a lot of events which can be scheduled. There is not enough sophisticated method to define the schedules. Like giving a specific medicine at 3 every day. Or heat the water every 3 hours.
so the hourly schedules might postpone the next event. When you press the button, that the event happened for example 1 hours later than scheduled, it would push the next one 1 hour later
the daily doesn't care about if it has happened 1 hour later
you could see the logs what event happened when in a simple list
totally confused. Some inner voice brought up ASP.NET. I could create a supermarket simulation with Entity Framework combined with ASP.NET. What do you think?
when you are working with stuff like WPF, you could easily just use a WindowsMachine because you are already locked anyway, with it, you have a more detailed api of your device
when you want to make an application that supports more platforms than just Windows, then you would probably want to use the Machine interface instead, working with a less rich api but with broader support
public interface Base {
Object GetObject();
}
public interface Sub : Base {
override String GetObject();
}
public class Main : Sub {
public override String GetObject() => "Hello, World!";
public static void Main()
{
var instance = new Main();
String text = instance.GetObject();
Console.WriteLine(text);
}
}
We tend to rely on caching solutions to improve database performance. Caching frequently-accessed queries in memory or via a database can optimize write/read performance and reduce network latency, especially for heavy-workload applications, such as gaming services and Q&A portals. But you can further improve performance by pooling users’ connections to a database. Client users need…
white space is white space. White space is love, white space is life. White space can be used for spacing but not for writing. White space oh white space why do you exist? White space oh white space, thou arn't blackspace ♥
(think of a sheet of stanard whtie paper, you write in black, everything which is left empty is white space, e.g. space or tab)
The following mentions that deserializing data from an untrusted source is a security issue. Is the security issue that the code could end up using an untrusted deserialized data in operations where only a trusted piece of deserialized data should be used, or is it that the untrusted deserialized data could be like a Trojan horse that starts carrying out nefarious activities in your program? I know an OS can be infected like the latter, but I don't know if the same can happen to a program?
> Always verify inputs, and never deserialize data from an untrusted source. The re-created object runs on a local computer with the permissions of the code that deserialized it. Verify all inputs before using the data in your application.
@Wietlol I'm not sure what you mean by backing side?
@Wietlol I want to check my understanding of inheritance where interfaces are concerned. In that code you wrote, I know that if you implement WindowsMachine then you must implement all members declared in Machine, but does WindowsMachine actually inherit anything from Machine?
As far as I know only implementations of members are inherited.
if you have a security vulnerability due to deserialization, that probably means that the code you execute after you have the deserialized object is stupid
as for the machine example, no it doesnt inherit anything from its parent interface