continuing the singleton thing: in a "pure" OO environment, a function's only inputs are its arguments and its outputs are either changes to the arguments or its return value(s), but when you have singletons, you may actually have input from more than that, and that really messes up readability and data flow
public class User
{
public int UserId { get; set; }
public virtual List<Follower> Followers { get; set; }
}
public class Follower
{
public int FollowerId { get; set; }
public int UserId { get; set; }
public virtual User User { get; set; }
}
@asp.netdeveloper not really, I have only used the .net classes (that zneak pointed you to) I am in bed now (01:08) here so I cant dig out a code sample
If you want the follower to follow a user but also be a user
public class Follower
{
public int FollowerId { get; set; }
public int FollowedUserId { get; set; }
public int UserId { get; set; }
public virtual User User { get; set; }
public virtual User FollowedUser { get; set; }
}
A FollowerId will define the relationship between a User and a User that they follow. It would be proper to say that instead of FollowerId the primary key could be made from the composite of UserId and FollowedUserId
"Codd's twelve rules are a set of thirteen rules" does not actually make sense because that is implying that his twelve rules are a set of thirteen rules, which isn't logical and just plain can't happen, unless you include the set rule (which only a programmer would think of)
Ok
I've asked several times before on stackoverflow about whether you can pretend to implement an interface but not actually do so.
.asm. is not a safe language. It will skip out the bill if you don't bring the salad. It will watch a second movie at the theater with one ticket. It will double park in that area that two cars clearly could have parked in. It will crash and burn if you moved into al instead of ax.