I created a project that the nodes are defined using attributes, and I set it in the web.config to scan for attributes, and it works fine.
I don't use an XML file at all.
Now I want to add a dynamic node provider, how do I do it?
Is there a way to do it without the XML (.sitemap) file?
I need to...
I've created my custom control. It has a property that is called "Tab." This property adds a collection of "FloorsInformation" controls that are inherited from "DockContainerItem" class to my custom control.
Now, I want to add "FloorsInformation" controls to my custom control after click the "...
I've created my custom control. It has a property that is called "Tab." This property adds a collection of "FloorsInformation" controls that are inherited from "DockContainerItem" class to my custom control.
Now, I want to add "FloorsInformation" controls to my custom control after click the "...
I'm doing stuff with BitArrays, so I wrote my own one. Now the point is that sometimes I was to edit let's say MyOwnBitArray[1] and ...[2], since they use the same 32bit integer the bitarray gets corrupted. Also if I just lock the complete BitArray all advantages of multithreading are gone.
I don't use winforms a great lot (in fact almost never) and your problem is really obscure. The only thing I can think of suggesting is making a custom CollectionEditor to see if you can then access the buttons events but my confidence in that solution is less than 1% so it's barely even worth mentioning.
but point that out to anyone and they'll be quick to either rip your balls off via your throat or desperately try and defend it by saying they used to be in the premier league in the stone age or whenever it was
I'm in a particularly shit mood today ^_^
I almost blatantly flamed someone for getting the CIDR notation in their question wrong
they had a range 192.168.0.1 to 192.168.0.254 and they wrote it as {192.168.0.1/31, 192.168.0.0/32} which is just completely wrong, so it would have been justified. Just shitty
lived in London from 2 years about 10/11 years ago, I was a kid so I don't really know much but from the things my mum's said it was a shit place to live unless you were well loaded. I don't like cities anyway they're full of people =P
I like London. Wasn't intending on ending up there but kinda just worked out that way and quite a lot of my friends from school/uni have ended up there too so can't be that bad :)
Update: providing a truly generalized extension method FullOuterJoin
See it live on http://ideone.com/O36nWc
static void Main(string[] args)
{
var ax = new[] {
new { id = 1, name = "John" },
new { id = 2, name = "Sue" } };
var bx = new[] {
new { id = 1, surname...
@dav_i Not a lot.... Working on a 10-year-old shoddily written classic ASP/.Net Frankenstein love-child and occasionally writing bad SharePoint code and getting paid for it. That developer all other developers hate because he doesn't have a clue what he's doing
@dav_i I believe there are competitors, codepad.org might suit you as well. IIRC Liveworkspace is down right now. There is at least one online 'IDE' with complete project support (I don't remember the URL right now)
@sehe It looks good but I couldn't tell you how correct it was. If it works it works =P
I vaguely follow it
@dav_i I'm also currently doing that Train2Game course. I figure if I find something I enjoy doing (cos I really don't like doing this) I might be motivated to get good at it rather than just being able to weld bits of code together
What kind of position was it? You may not have had enough experience, especially if they were looking for someone who already had commercial experience (I'mm assuming you don't)
Which is why I opted for this Train2Game thing, they say they get you into a job by the end of it. The guy said the top 20% of people get the best jobs, but they're only basing that on a number of modular 20 multiple-choice questions so I'm gonna make sure I have a decent portfolio to go with it
They get roughly 50% of people who pass into a job but I don't know what a pass grade is and you don't know the level of skill those people ended up with
Yeah I tried that, I even got some advice off a guy who used to work with me that took a Software Architecture degree but I just ended up going round in circles refactoring everythign and realising it wasn't going to work.
So I thought I should try and do it by the book. If the course doesn't help my confusion I'll be sorely disappointed but I'll have the qualification and I'll have built a game by then anyway
Nah I didn't like it really either, some of the concepts were cool but it was basically a point and click game that centred around your ability to juggle numbers and wait a long time before you got anything
Elite is a seminal space trading video game, originally published by Acornsoft in 1984 for the BBC Micro and Acorn Electron computers. The game's title derives from one of the player's goals of raising their combat rating to the exalted heights of "Elite". It was written and developed by David Braben and Ian Bell, who had met while they were both undergraduates at Jesus College, Cambridge. Non-Acorn versions of the game were published by Firebird, Imagineer and Hybrid Technology.
Elite was one of the first home computer games to use wire-frame 3D graphics with hidden line removal. Ano...
But I though it would be better for me to do something I would enjoy making and playing than something commercially viable, especially as I'm not likely to be building my own game studio from scratch
But there was tonnes of things that I thought were good about both games and some bits I thought were a bit lacking, naturally everybody thinks they can do better =P
Worth a shot. Even if my spaceships are big grey boxes floating in space cos I can't draw for shit
Do you know of a site that lists the simpler physics equations, around A-level grade? I can't remember the gravity one and there's a few others I can see being useful
Who doesn't want to throw things into black holes?
There was a really simple one I remember that just calculated the force of attraction between two objects. I think all you needed to know was the mass of the two objects and the distance apart
In numerical analysis, the Runge–Kutta methods () are an important family of implicit and explicit iterative methods for the approximation of solutions of ordinary differential equations. These techniques were developed around 1900 by the German mathematicians C. Runge and M.W. Kutta.
See the article on numerical ordinary differential equations for more background and other methods. See also List of Runge–Kutta methods.
Common fourth-order Runge–Kutta method
One member of the family of Runge–Kutta methods is so commonly used that it is often referred to as "RK4", "classical Runge–Kutta ...
Yeah I don't see the relevance of that at the moment.. I'm guessing it's easier to use one of those equations than re-calculating the force every frame?
I dunno, still a massive noob
Might have to buy some physics and maths textbooks (cringe)
and in theory (I think) if you have a mechanism for gravity and you can control your entry speed and vector, with some trial and error on the player's part they will eventually get it
ah yes I see it now, I had to actually read it rather than skimming it =P
@Sean Optical Illusion. There is no functional difference, but .Union() is the Linq extension method, whereas UnionWith is a member of HashSet<> which takes advantage of the internal (hashtable) representation and uses the comparer associated with the HashSet