I'm going to love leaving this place, I started writing in C# after one of the other programmers did it (she left) and just got into the swing of it. Now there's a mix of C# and VB projects that I've done so someone is going to cry like a baby when they inherit my job.
Or, they'll just learn the syntax and deal with it. Which is more likely tbh
Well, seeing as Debug.WriteLine is fairly generic, you could give a fairly generic answer, rather than deflecting by asking another question. As Stuart has no idea what I'm doing and neither do you.
Rather than adding additional classes/namespaces to my code temporarily, I change the program to reflect its internal state so I can debug the program independently of any other program.
@KendallFrey No, I just wanted to see you squirm =P
I got rid of them anyway, I realised there's no point as I'm only going to throw the exception to the calling code cos at this level there's really nothing I can do with it. And as Kendall so gracefully pointed out, I'll just use a damn breakpoint.
@StuartBlackler I imagine Debug.WriteLine would be useful for writing out the internal state of the program for someone with an understanding to use. Often when writing libraries you abstract away so much code it's hard to get to the root of the problem.
@KendallFrey I couldn't tell you if it was better or not. AFAIK they produce the same stuff, just in different ways. In WebForms that wouldn't take me long especially if I had written it myself in the first place. I'd create one simple master page and 3 content pages. Probably about an hour. Probably longer with MVC though if anything I've heard is true
Hello Developer Name, I recently came across your profile on SomeSite and was really impressed with your background! Please contact me in regards to an opportunity in NotReallyYourField today!
Alright, does anyone have an MVC project that uses Amplify/Knockout or some other MVVM pattern? I'm not sure I understand what the file structure is supposed to look like.
@JohanLarsson I found that when sending emails from no-reply addresses like for scheduled reports, if you add a name it gets through
so this usually works mail.From = new MailAddress("[email protected]", "Chicken Little");
That could just have been Microsoft's spam filter being an idiot though. Chances are that if an email comes from the same email domain as yours, it's not spam
If I'm not mistaken, when you declare an int ( Int32 ) it allocates the amount of memory that a full int32 need. So, when you do 1*1 or 100*100, it would use the same amount of memory to process both operations... Correct me if I'm wrong @KendallFrey
There is a possibility that the multiplier uses an incremental multiply, in which case large numbers would take longer. Though I doubt modern CPU's will do that.
for example (maybe im wrong )adding two binary number is like what they teach you at elementary school but in binary : adding 010 with 111 is adding 0 and 1 then take carry C0 then adding 1 and 1 with C0 carry then adding 0 and 1 witch C1 carry and such...
so the bigger the binary number the larger the number of operations
and each adder need as input the output (carry ) of previous operation
I'm saying that, when you do 1 times 1 or 1000 times 1000, the memory that will be processed will be the same, that will use the same amount of memory to process the result.
@kendall : ok seems clear to me. a remark : that would means that transistors works faster than the time for one cycle ? for example adding two 32 bit number on a cpu that that take one cycle to do that would mean that each adder work at 1/32 of the time of a cycle ?
Developers who use C-like languages typically conceive of “if” and “while” and “for” and so on as taking either a single statement, or a group of any number of statements in a block: if (x) M(); if (x) { M(); … Continue reading →
@tigrou Yes, if the switching isn't fast enough to get the ripple all the way through, it will have to wait multiple ticks. It would still be constant time though.
and the worst part about it all is that there was the cutest blonde checkout chick at Sainsburys who I would've totally asked to go to coffee with if I didn't look like Rudolph but I figured I'd keep my "no no" streak going
Frozen is a 2010 American horror film written and directed by Adam Green and starring Kevin Zegers, Shawn Ashmore, and introducing Emma Bell.
Plot
Childhood friends Dan Walker (Kevin Zegers) and Joe Lynch (Shawn Ashmore) along with Dan's girlfriend Parker O'Neill (Emma Bell) spend a Sunday afternoon at a New England ski resort on Mount Holliston. Not wanting to pay full price for three ski lift tickets, Dan convinces Parker to bribe the ski lift attendant Jason (Ed Ackerman) to let them all on the ski lift. On the way up, the ski lift shuts down, but starts back up again shortly. After sp...
Unfortunately:
Face unlock is closed-source google proprietary code, so we have no opportunity to modify it.
Source: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1367610
is there a way to serve stack exchange flairs in https?
[TestFixture]
public class ZneakTests
{
[Test]
public void TestNameTest()
{
var zneak = new Zneak<int>();
var zneak1 = new Zneak<int, int>();
}
}
public class Zneak<T>
{
}
public class Zneak<T,T1>
{
}
}