If Request.Cookies("EventID") Is Nothing Then
hidEventID.Value = Request.QueryString("id")
Dim HttpCookie As New HttpCookie("EventID")
HttpCookie.Value = Request.QueryString("id")
HttpCookie.Expires = DateTime.Now.AddDays(30)
Request.Cookies.Set(HttpCookie)
Response.Redirect("Attendees.aspx?id=" + Request.QueryString("id"))
End If
anyone?
This should be setting cookie , it never gets set , and always is nothing
Guys, I am referencing a dll from another soloution, but when I change that code and recompile, in the other soloution it does not get updated, for example if I change a mehtod signature it doesnt detect the change even if I remove and add that dll gain
If you are adding manually, you should add the reference from the output folder of the other project. That way, when you build the other project, the referencing solution should get the updated dll
Facts: Joe is an important customer of Bill, who is the sales manager at a large manufacturing company. Erin is African-American and she is the receptionist at Bill's company. Joe has been making derogatory comments to Erin about her race when he visits the company on a regular basis. Erin tells Bill that she does not like Joe's conduct.
Question: Can Erin be unlawfully harassed by Joe even though Joe does not work for her employer?
Hey C#, I need an advice on elegant solution. I'd like to delete elements of the Dictionary<string, Object> while iterating over it. Like: foreach (Object object in dictionary) { // some work with object dictionary.Remove(object.Id) } The best solution I came up to so far is to iterate over a copy of the keys collection using it as keys. string[] keys = dictionary.Keys.ToArray(); foreach (string key in keys) { // some work with object dictionary.Remove(key); }
I have this code which is being run every frame of a game:
foreach (var repeaterAction in conditionTimes.Keys)
{
if (repeaterAction.Condition() == true)
{
if (conditionTimes[repeaterAction] == TimeSpan.Zero)
{
repeaterAction.Action(...
unfortunately I only speak French and English (and I have no idea what it would be like to get a work visa to Sweden, although I wouldn't expect it to be too hard)
If I'd write to a MemoryStream using a BinaryWriter, then use Bitmap.Save on the initial MemoryStream, will it write behind the binarywriter's stuff or overwrite it?
well I can tell you that there is no way you can iterate over a collection and modify it at the same time in .net, so whatever you want to do you will need at least one additional collection
@KendallFrey An enumerator remains valid as long as the collection remains unchanged. If changes are made to the collection, such as adding, modifying, or deleting elements, the enumerator is irrecoverably invalidated and its behavior is undefined.
ConcurrentDictionary<string, Object> dictionary = new ConcurrentDictionary<string, Object>(); dictionary.TryAdd("1", new Object()); dictionary.TryAdd("2", new Object()); dictionary.TryAdd("3", new Object());
foreach (KeyValuePair<string, Object> kv in dictionary) { Object o; dictionary.TryRemove(kv.Key, out o); }
@KendallFrey we will never agree on that. Doesn't mean i document every for each, but if/else conditions have comments to explain decision making process.
The reason for comments is not to explain what happens. That should be obvious from the code. Comments are to describe why the code is written that way.
an example of comment ..lol . @Kendall will hate this
public int GetPositionForOfferAndType(long offerID, EItem_Status.OfferTypes offerType, int channelID, int countryID) { var offerTypes = offerType.GetFlags();
foreach (var type in offerTypes) { // This loop for offerTypes was added so that AllVouchers tab on frontend, would see the top offers // by offer position, just like Mobile, Printable tabs do. This code was initially equipped to only // deal with single offerType at a time (which is the case when Mobile or Printable vouchers tab is clicked)
@KendallFrey actually, it syncs with the TargetProcess bug/feature requested, so when someone goes to TFS, and sees the changed code in that file "History", they can read the comment and understand why it was done
@tranceporter I fail all reviews if I don't see comments on checkins. When people are looking for what was checked in, it's easier to read 1-5 lines of comments than massive code chunks
@RyanTernier Nothing wrong in using implicit vars, if it can aid refactoring. Depends on personal preference. I don't like red. I avoid looking at red cars on the motorway..lol
@tranceporter Example: -Fixed Defect 243 by changing the DB COnnector -Fixed Defect 104 which was in the PErsonLoad class -Fixed Defect ABC where Chuck NOrris actually died. etc.
Commit messages on checkins can include fixed bug numbers, and that itself is enough. You can go to your bug tracking system, find the bug info, then see the checkin changeset, and read the comments on the changed code
@KendallFrey We have processes, and everything must be tracable. Every checkin must be traced back to a requirement/feature/defect, otherwise why were you doing work?
@RyanTernier -Fixed Defect 104 which was in the PErsonLoad class : What is the point in mentioning PersonLoad class, when you can view the changeset and see that PersonLoad class was modified?
@RyanTernier You are looking at it wrong. If you know the bug that was fixed, but is not working correctly, all you need to search for is that bug no in the comments on the checkin.
@Pheonixblade9 Yes, that's where these things are caught. People called it crazy when I implemented these processes last year when I got hired, but our quality increased about 200% since then (customers and internal staff noticed it)
@tranceporter My team works with SVN, not TFS, so a single checkin cannot automatically link to a Defect like it does in TFS. Because of that I require people to do those comments.
@Pheonixblade9 Sorry, but I just feel that's bloat and repeated stuff. If you are using tools like TargetProcess for project management, you already have feature, user stories and bugs. All you need are those numbers on the source control checkins
@tranceporter True, then someone can match them up. But when a client is paying $300 / hour for a project manager to get them a list of what was changed, it's a lot easier/chaper/better for the client to get developers to do more detailed notes, than for a PM to spend an hour digging through change logs.
@tranceporter we do the numbers on source control checkins, but you still can use the commit messages in the ticket to see exactly what changes the dev made. Documentation is almost never a waste of time
@RyanTernier Surely the client would want business notes? So all you do is pick a bunch of delivered user stories, and paste their description is a word file and send it. Why involve the dev?
My team lead is looking at our Javascript code base with Resharper. I think he's going to have a stroke or something, judging by the sounds he's making
I tried with below Linq. var q = from c in xmlDoc.Elements("English").Descendants("url") where c.Descendants("loc").SingleOrDefault().Value.Contains(url) select new { URL = c.Element("loc").Value, Title = c.Element("title").Value, Description = c.Element("description").Value, Keyword1 = c.Element("Keyword1").Value, Keyword2 = c.Element("Keyword2").Value };
lol. To keep the SE NYC data center on line (Peer 1), they are having to carry fuel up 18 flights of stairs in buckets because the fuel pump is broken.
I create base page As below.. public class BasePage : System.Web.UI.Page {}
protected override void OnLoad(EventArgs e) { // I wrote Above code here.. string fileName = Server.MapPath("~/Seofile.xml"); xmlDoc = XDocument.Load(fileName); var q = from c in xmlDoc.Elements("English").Descendants("url") where c.Descendants("loc").SingleOrDefault().Value.Contains(url) select new { URL = c.Element("loc").Value, Title = c.Element("title").Value, Description = c.Element("description").Value, Keyword1 = c.Element("Keyword1").Value,
@Abhishek that where clause doesn't seem to make sense. You look up the descendents of an element called url, then check to see whether any of them contain url. Your document doesn't have nested url elements.
cool. I don't know what "suxxxx" means, but I will assume it is some new MSN slang for "fucking awesome, and the most actively developed in language in the world today"