@TravisJ reminds me of this story I used to tell my friends... "yeah man, last night was crazy... I woke up and somebody had shit in my pants! What an asshole! I never found him..."
@ShotgunNinja I saw a laser show set to dubstep (90% skrillex, though... gonna have to email em to get some Flux Pavilion/Benny Benassi/DeadMau5 or something) at the Pacific Science Center this weekend. Highly recommend if you ever go to Seattle
@Janman Not quite; there's a lot of compiler optimizations that have been developed... the only problem is the dependence on features such as jumps or whatnot for exception handling, and the relatively large amount of memory overhead required for class definitions.
@ShotgunNinja Okay. After I finish learning C#, I'm thinking about moving to something more low-level, such as embedded programming. I don't know if I should choose C or C++, but the way you put it, C++ sounds just fine
@Steve When I was a beginner, I started with C++, but quickly changed to C# as I didn't understand C++ at all. C# is so clean and simple, but now I miss something more low level
I wonder, if I were to sign up for this and throw a link onto some random hello world site, how long it'd take for someone to pay me say £1 for absolutely nothing aws.amazon.com/fps
i hate steam, i bought a game, in the store, with a cd, i put the install cd in, and it just downloaded the game instead of installing it off of the cd.... not a big deal unless you're on a 50k/sec connection
If I clear the depth buffer for the portal and re-draw the portal with a new camera position, I'm afraid I'm going to see what's on the 'inside' of the other end of portal.
It should only draw stuff that is 'deeper' than the portal.
I have some simple notes from when I tried to learn DX11. This note might interrest you: "For example many games render to the surface of a model, then render that model to the back buffer. This technique can produce a variety of effects. If you have played the game Portal you will have seen an example of this"
@LewsTherin It builds a jQuery object around form, then binds to the submit event for all elements matching form an event which calls the inner anonymous function.
@Steve I didn't imply that was the case; I simply stated that jQuery's AJAX was one possible thing that could be done to handle a form submit event, rather than doing a form submit redirect.
UPDATE OrderItemAdjustment
SET [Sent] = @Now
WHERE OrderItemAdjustment.MerchantAccountID = @MerchantAccountID
AND OrderItemAdjustment.Ready = 1
AND EXISTS
(
SELECT *
FROM dbo.OrderItemAdjustment AS oa
WHERE oa.[Sent] IS NULL
AND oa.OrderItemAdjustmentID = OrderItemAdjustment.OrderItemAdjustmentID
)
what I changed it to:
UPDATE OrderItemAdjustment
SET [Sent] = @Now
WHERE OrderItemAdjustment.MerchantAccountID = @MerchantAccountID
AND OrderItemAdjustment.Ready = 1
AND Sent IS NULL
Entity Framework; I have a number of objects and I'm trying to get them into the db. I'm using a generic repository, and that's working fine. I've got a base class for things that need to go into the db, and it has a public uint ID marked [Key]... but EF still says none of my models have a key defined. What have I missed?
the "win": runs a self executing function, attaches or overwrites the variable message to the global object using this as the global object (window). To separate the next command, a ; is used. Then alert references the message directly, since the global context is implied.