@zneak Hmm. I was actually reading on this topic last night. blog.emptycrate.com/node/323 says pre-increments are the way to go. Do you have a better resource for me?
It's not more efficient in Java. It can be more efficient in languages where the increment/decrement operators can be overloaded, but otherwise the performance is exactly the same.
The difference between x++ and ++x is that x++ returns the value of x before it was incremented, and ++x returns th...
some weird (read "non-RISC") architectures have dereference-and-increment instructions, on these it may be faster to use ++x than x++, but only if you use a cheap compiler that can't figure out by itself you're not using the return value of the expression
you won't be able to demonstrate that with VS's compiler, unless you use a custom type that overloads said operators
When you use LightSwitch, much of the repetitive work is done for you and, in fact, you can create a LightSwitch application without writing any code at all! For most applications, the only code you have to write is the code that only you can write: the business logic.
Well, the only benefit that you would get is not needing to write the fading code yourself. That would be outweighed by the amount of code you need to get even the most basic WPF interop working.
The situation: I have a global "Loading" form that will be used for almost every task in the application. There is a timer in there that waits for about 3-4 seconds and then initiates the code for next event. The problem is, I can't put code specific to one form in there since that form will be used for other parts too. So I need to somehow put in the parameters enough information so it does the task for the different forms.
Does anyone know where I can download more RAMs?
I'm working on a video in Windows Movie Maker and my computer is going really slow. My friend said I need more RAM but I don't know where to download more!
Any tip appreciated!
@KendallFrey If I understand correctly, you want me to treat the "Loading" form as an individual object, correct? If so, I am trying to do that, I just don't understand what you said because you were so brief.
public class A
{
public A(string name)
{
Name = name;
}
public string Name { get; protected set; }
}
public class B:A
{
public B(string name) : base(name)
{
}
public new string Name
{
get { return base.Name; }
set { base.Name = value; }
}
}
:6236831
public class B:A,IA
{
public B(string name) : base(name)
{
}
public new string Name
{
get { return base.Name; }
set { base.Name = value; }
}
}
interface IA
{
string Name { get; }
}
I think the main problem is that the internal data isn't meant to be changed directly. If you add several layers of abstraction, it would be much nicer. You would likely want a method instead of a property setter for this.
Put this way, if the data is important enough to be kept protected, it's important enough that you shouldn't be able to change it without asking the class nicely to change it for you.
but suppose that at the beginning of any method you could access something like Runtime.AccessResolver to see exactly what credentials the calling instance has