alright, I want to provide the user with access to an object inside of a delegate so that I can close out all the resources for them. I've seen it done, web.archive.org/web/20100703123454/http://… but I don't really understand the process
i am trying to learn programming started with C#. Wrote some simple console and desktop applications(used functions, classes, ADO.Net), i am finding it a little confusing trying to learn programming concepts and syntax and framework at the same time. Should i start to learn C first and come back to C# later?
i don't have a problem with people asking dumb questions (in chat), or not knowing something and trying to improve, but if you come in and just ask for people to randomly upvote your shitty questions... theres something wrong with that
it just sounds like he's being too aggresive when it comes to his learning, he needs to slow down a bit, and thats probably something that he'll either learn when people stop answering all of his silly questions, or somebody tells him that (and he actually listens)
i mean you gotta give him props for being motivated, but then deduct some of those props after he doesn't realize what the problem is
@user2345661 well, yes and no. i mean if you fill up your plate with too much its only going to bog you down.... but its great to get some experience in linux or unix for sure
@user2345661 Depends. I am a Linux Fan-boy but I can also tell you I learn things the Masochistic way... Buy a book and learn from the ground up. -- I have a friend who is prominent in the Ubuntu community who told me she got where she was (Lead Systems Admin of something) by just learning on her own.
@Steve I am actually trying to divide my learning time between programming(C# as you advised), networking(i know basics but to understand protocols, communication etc) and OS(either Win/Linux/Unix) so i can start learning ASP.Net and PHP after getting a good Base with C#. Which OS do you recommend will be better to learn?
@user2345661 if you want to do web development, learn c#/asp.net or php, if you want to learn application development, learn c#/winforms/wpf, or java.... if you try to learn everthing at once right off the bat, you aren't going to be good at anything because your time will be divided up among too many things
now that doesn't mean if you get bored for a day or a week you can't play around with other technologies to see whats up with them... but your focus should be more precise
Gents, do you know of free desktop proxy server that I could put between me and a bunch of corporate ones? I am moderately peeved having to put my password in a pop up every hour
@Bobson they should ban people, but if they take away the hope of ever having your orignal account back (10 years), its almost a guarentee that they're going to create a new account
so to answer your question: i dont know. if the punishment is too small nobody will learn their lesson, if the punishment is too large, they aren't actually punished because they'll just create a new account instead of waiting for the ban to expire
@Steve Yeah is don't know why I just don't like the class room. I blew 14 years of my life in one I don't think I need to rush out and blow another 5 just to get told I am under qualified because the standards I was working with are out dated (Thankfully I have yet to run into an issue with C# 3 being usable with C# 5.) Plus Solo means I can learn more and at my own pace.
You need to factor the rep they have earned in too - 300 rep is not that hard to earn if you watch for new questions in your field and answer them first. But 30,000 rep would be worth waiting several months to get access again.
@CodeMonkeyAlx i like the classroom too, i seem to remember better when i hear people verbally teach it, and explain it.... but i don't learn well by just hacking t hings together off of half assed tutorials online
@Bobson yeah absolutely, who wouldn't wait several months for 30,000 rep, but who would wait 10 years for 30,000 rep