If you're on a version of Windows 11 that is build 22000 or greater, you can now use WSL to mount Linux disks directly. Run winver to see your Windows version. I'm on 22000.282 as of the time of this writing. I can also run wsl --help and see the --mount instructions. If you don't have them, you're not on the latest, or you can try installing/update WSL from the Windows Store. Installing WSL f…
My PowerShell upgraded to the new PowerShell 7.2.0 and it happened automatically since I get PowerShell from the Windows Store. However, my fancy prompt use PSReadLine with Predictive Autocomplete stopped working suddenly. However, suddenly I started getting this error on every prompt. Could not load type 'System.Management.Automation.Subsystem.PredictionResult' from assembly 'Microsoft.Powe…
\[**[flixius](https://discord.gg/PNMq3pBSUe)**] Quote: When using Visual Studio 2022 and starting your app with the debugger the basic Hot Reload experience *works with most types of .NET apps and framework versions*, this includes .NET Framework, *.NET Core* and .NET 5+ (for both C# and VB.NET as applicable). ^ i just downloaded vs 2022 commuinity, created a new project Web project on .net core 3.1 and this hot reload thing doesn't work...?! when i change the target framework to .NET 6.0 it works. on .NET 5.0 it also didn't. am i doing something wrong or did i missed something about hot re…
There's a time for generality, and there's a time for solving the problem actually posed. This is one of the latter times. If you want to make a method that turns a sequence of doubles into a sequence of partial sums, then just do that:
public static IEnumerable<double> CumulativeSum(this IEnume...
quite a nice solution, except for the dreaded: "Now, I note that if that is user input then double.Parse can throw an exception; it might be a better idea to do something like:"
[milleniumbug] the implementation presented as the extension method is pretty much what it would be if it was in .NET. The only thing that could be improved, would be to add parameter validation, and separate the iterator block to another method and call it after validation is done
considering yield is a compiler feature and yields no actual runtime concepts, the decompiler that I use to look at the implementations of functions like Select or Where would probably not pick up an actual yield statement
and yes, I'm aware they use loops and stuff, but I just don't wanna write my own extension methods if the functionalities could potentially exist in the LINQ library
@JansthcirlU but still, I can't be bothered to look for which website actually hosts the source code, figure out which version I am running, figure out how to find the source for that version, then read from an online document how the function should behave rather than actually seeing it in my IDE
I remember when raffles were illegal in student groups, so the group I was in had a "test of skill" to a random winner where they had to throw a crumpled ball of paper into a trashcan right next to them
Hi all... I'm a bit new to C# (I'm in Unity FTR) and am trying to understand how to do the following. I know I can do string[][] to create an X,Y grid (100x100) where each 'cell' is a string value, but I can't figure out the syntax to create the same kind of grid, where each 'cell' value is an int array (4 integers, flags for Top, Right, Bottom, Left styling)
because of how C# defines consistency: "do the most random thing that users would never expect, as long as we always do it randomly, we are consistent"
this will work fine: var arr = new int[][100, 100];
one is the top, another the right, another the bottom and the final one is the left
according to the pattern and formatting I use, the struct will look like this:
public struct Cell
{
public Int32 Top { get; }
public Int32 Right { get; }
public Int32 Bottom { get; }
public Int32 Left { get; }
public Cell(
Int32 top,
Int32 right,
Int32 bottom,
Int32 left)
{
Top = top;
Right = right;
Bottom = bottom;
Left = left;
}
}
generally speaking, I would use a class, but considering you do this for gaming purposes, and the object is defined by its value, a struct should be more appropriate
also, perhaps you should use an actual IDE
not sure what tool you use to write the code, but your experience can be much improved if you use a tool that is meant to do that job
also... turns out C# just doesnt seem to support arrays that well
int[][,] is a valid type, but there is no normal constructor syntax for it
Thanks for all your help. Yeah within Unity it branches out to a given editor you specify to edit the code. 99% of the time I'm fine with VS code... not sure what the price is these days for Visual Studio... but likely a bit out of my budget for tinkering with game building.
still doesnt match what I use, but the tool I use does not have a free version
int[][,] test1 = new int[4][,];
int[,][] test2 = new int[][100,100];
int[,][] test3 = new int[100,100][];
... "consistency"
is C# the new Javascript?
are we the baddies?
@scunliffe you might want to avoid using multidimensional arrays though
just use a flat array
maybe even encapsulate your logic into a Matrix struct
public struct Matrix<T>
{
public Int32 Width { get; }
public Int32 Height { get; }
private T[] Data { get; }
public Matrix(Int32 width, Int32 height)
{
Width = width;
Height = height;
Data = new T[width * height];
}
// functions to operate on the data
}
the multidimensional array will use poor approaches on the default behavior
and might affect your performance if you do a few operations on it with larger arrays (keeping in mind 100x100 is an array of 10.000 objects)