Guys, I want to discuss an answer I received to a question I asked a while back. Do I need to start a new thread or what? I am new to this aspect of the site...
The answer suggests (which I thought was correct - but am now having doubts over) that the resource strings that are referenced at run-time are cached... The issue I am having is that if you look at the auto-generated .cs file it uses GetString() method. is the answer correct?
@Killercam Once a resourcefile is loaded, all resources a read into a hashtable. So everytime you access a resource it is read from that hashtable. So as long as you dont have like 100 resource files, I think you are okay from a performance point of view
> To make a form owned by another form, assign its Owner property a reference to the form that will be the owner.
> When a form is owned by another form, it is closed or hidden with the owner form. For example, consider a form named Form2 that is owned by a form named Form1. If Form1 is closed or minimized, Form2 is also closed or hidden. Owned forms are also never displayed behind their owner form.
> You can use owned forms for windows such as find and replace windows, which should not disappear when the owner form is selected. To determine the forms that are owned by a parent form, use the OwnedForms property.
@derape I have just seen your reply. I have decompiled mscorlib.dll myself and have looked through the code. it is really not clear if it is caching. It is doing some complex look-up, but is this caching of some sort- I don't know? I have asked another question on this here stackoverflow.com/questions/15928233/…
I have an app using facebook's javascript and c# sdk. One day I was getting the error 4 : Application request limit reached. In the facebook app dashboard I see this.
Too Many Calls - 1 hour, 50 minutes
Method Fraction of Budget
gr:get:User 115%
gr:...
Well, all someone had to do was put in my email address into the login page on some device that wasn't mine, and Facebook would have flipped out about it.
- Is there a chance for promotion in the future? - In what way is performance measured and reviewed? - How many other people are in the team I am potentially joining?
does any one know how can i correctly nest this operation? var model = new [] { foreach (var i in lista) { new EstablishmentListingModel {Id = i.EstablishmentId, Checked=false, Name=i.Name};
Hi, I'm not sure if it's against the rules/frowned upon to link questions here when in need of help? Would anyone mind having a look at a problem I'm lost with?
I created a chat server with c#. I can run this all on localhost and the client can connect to the server.
I set up an Amazon EC2 cloud service. I set up the server on there and started it. I cannot connect to the server running in my ec2 instance from my client running on my home computer.
I s...
@RoelvanUden i'm not binding to anything on the server, i accept any connection and don't limit the source ip address. On the client I connect to the servers ip addy
yeah, i dont know why i was thinking "i want it to listen on this computer"... no shit its going to listen on the current computer, i'm running it on the current computer, dip shit steve
Something to the effect of "This may appear to overflow when casted from ulong to long, but because of two's complement and the fact that we're only doing addition, the binary equivalent still holds true."
If you want to see my academic form of comments that need comments, look no further than my project description for my AI Wumpus World project from last year.
I am having some difficulty compiling a C++ program that I've written.
This program is very simple and, to the best of my knowledge, conforms to all the rules set forth in the C++ Standard. I've read over the entirety of ISO/IEC 14882:2003 twice to be sure.
The program is as follows:
Here i...