I'm writing a checkout page, and I want to add the delivery into my existing repeater that displays the basket without actually adding it to the basket. Nevermind. Wooden programmers the lot of you ;D
var list1 = new int?[] {1, 2, 3, 4, 5};
var list2 = new int?[] {3, 4, 5, 6, 7};
var joined = list1.FullOuterJoin(list2, a => a, b => b, (a, b, c) => new {list1=a, list2=b});
joined.ToList().ForEach(Console.WriteLine);
@sehe Right. I am constantly reminded of why I prefer C# and hate supporting crappy VB projects. VB's TypeOf statement won't take an object. You have to use GetType() instead. Also I'm rather scared of what you having work to do means. Especially with the evil laugh.
Am I right in thinking that the .Net Framework was built from the ground up and VB.Net is only the way it is with its nasty inconsistencies with C# because of backwards compatibility? (i.e. appeasing all the old VB6 nuts out there?)
@sehe Is your profile picture a reference to Jonathan Coulton's 'Code Monkey'?
To summarise (when people say maybe later they almost always mean no ;]): it's a song that he wrote about a code monkey. The video uses WoW models so the code monkey is a big black gorilla. Said code monkey bitches and whines about his job and how he just wants to be with the secretary at the front desk but she never notices him. Hence me asking, cos your profile pic is a gorilla.
It's quite well written and the lyrics are permanently engrained into my mind. (8)Code monkey get up get coffee, Code Monkey go to job. Code monkey have boring meeting, boring manager Rob. Rob say Code Monkey very dilligent, but his output stinks. His code not functional or elegant, what does Code Monkey think? Code Monkey think maybe manager wanna write goddamn login page himself.(8)
(8) Code monkey not sayin, out loud, Code Monkey not stupid, just proud. Code monkey likes Fritos. Code Monkey likes Tab and Mountain Dew. Code Monkey very simple man, with big warm fuzzy secret heart. Code monkey likes youuuu.. Code Monkey likes yooouuuu... lots(8)
first verse and chorus
and ye olde MSN music emoticons, which IMHO every chat client everywhere should support
I am trying to make a form with a gridview that "auto-updates". I get data from a CSV file and need to put it in there. Since it's alot of rows, I thought I'd do it with a thread fetching the data. Since I'm not really experienced with threads I am kind of stuck right now.. I'm getting "Parameter count mismatch" as error. Can anyone help me out here or just point me in the right direction? The code I have right now is this: pastebin.com/sL20KRZy
@Rune you could read it in line by line (or into a memory stream first) and then santity check then add into a DataTable which your GridView is bound to?
I've put the same code into a new winforms project and I don't see anything
@dav_i I think his problem is with calling a method on the form from another thread, which he's got right by using BeginInvoke but he's getting an error
Here is a **quick'n-dirty** cookup: http://ideone.com/H4gCoE Obviously, all the linq invocations should be reviewed for efficiency. Also, it assumes the input sequence are ordered by DefaultComparere<T> (since it invokes Max<T> without custom comparer)
@Rune can you put a breakpoint before your loop and step through it all (F10 will step over a function call, F11 steps into it, step over any function calls you know work, and step into the ones you want to investigate)
But the error does come from the BeginInvoke, because when I comment that out it goes to the next one (that I expected): Cross-thread operation not valid: Control 'dataGrid' accessed from a thread other than the thread it was created on.
No it's not that, I've done that before and it never even noticed. It was sound asleep the whole time
It could be from your rows.add then
you might not see the error because it's on another thread and I know debugging other threads is a nightmare cos they just pop up whenever they feel like it
Maybe you have to do it that way because otherwise the definition for BeginInvoke would have to include a params object[] thing at the end rather than just taking one object
Linq to objects is nice, although I know why it's such a pain... Traditional programming languages aren't designed to be used to manipulate data in the same way as SQL with built-in bits and bobs.
Expression Trees?
I'm gonna have to stop coming in here, it's making me feel inferior and useless xD
If I have, for example the following List<int>s
{ 1, 2, 3, 4 } //list1
{ 2, 3, 5, 6 } //list2
...
{ 3, 4, 5 } //listN
What is the best way to retrieve the following corresponding List<int?>s?
{ 1, 2, 3, 4, null, null } //list1
{ null, 2, 3, null, 5, 6 } ...
As soon as I found out I could write Linq closer to SQL thanks to all the added keywords after 3.5 or whenever it was (things like from, select etc.) without using Lambdas I almost wet myself in glee
You have to admit, having a nice big number like sehe has got would look nice. It'd be like having a "Yeah, I know my shit." badge on your shirt all the time
Ok a better question. Why isn't management studio 2012 remembering my production DB server?
I usually connect to it using fq.dn.co.uk and use windows auth but if I do that it doesn't remember it.... If I use the computer name it remembers it...
Does anyone know of a way to grab the HTML of a server control to put into an email? Thinking you could put something in the Unload event so it's finished with its rendering
Just off the top of your head, if nobody knows I'll have a google
well they usually provide you with a simple scenario (different classes that inherit a base class) and ask you what a method will return, you have a virtual one and non virtual one
@StuartBlackler being a programmer isn't easy. Being a really good programmer is so much harder. It's like we're expected to be walking dictionaries of code and technique from day 1.
@Sean I have almost 3 years exp as a dev. I feel like i should know alot more than i do. But the reality is, I self taught myself and only worked on very small apps (up to 10 users) so I have never had the need to work with most of the framework day to day
@StuartBlackler me too, if I count from when I started I've been doing it for like 8 years. Didn't encounter .Net until about 6 years ago and I just don't use it all at work. And the real kicker is that when I get home my brain is so blagged I don't want to do anything let alone start on a personal project =\
same here, ive been working with .net for like 5 years, but didnt learn much new stuff in the 3 years i was a soft dev. I just couldnt study after work. I would love to work on a project with a few people just to get used to working with git etc.