I'm on a first gen i7 920 at home, overclocked to 4.8 Ghz.
All though I had to drop it to 4.4 Ghz due to the occasional driver issue and restart. Mostly since my memory is rated for 1866 and I pushed it to 2133 mhz.
wow you got that up pretty high -- i got mine up to like 4.2 or 4.4, but i think the chip is messed up (during the summer my cooling kept falling off and i didn't notice, so i heated the chip up way too much)
everytime i eat stuff like fastfood or pizza i get so sluggish and depressed, and the only reasonable thing to do after that is eat more until i'm happy
@Steve dude, buy a crockpot. makes cooking so easy. just throw a hunk of meat and some veggies in before you go to bed, go to sleep, wake up to DELICIOUSNESS
private static object[,] BatchRead(Worksheet sheet, int n) { var range = sheet.get_Range("A1", "A" + n); var reads = (object[,])range.Value2; return reads; }
This question is baffling me a bit. I'm pretty sure it's something simple, but I can't quite get my mind around it. OP is using return PartialView instead of return View, and is nesting partials, but can't get the models to work right.
I've been seeing examples like the 3rd code block in this answer whereas the ViewModel's members are being accessed via model.Member, however I have NEVER been able to use the lowercase model in any of my views.
I understand how to use the @model directive and the Model property in MVC Razor Vie...
Really, the only difference I see is that he's using return PartialView, and the other guy is using return View. Is there a material difference in the way the model should be accessed?