var dictionary = new Dictionary<(Type,Type), object>();
Use a value tuple as the key, since value tuples are implicitly structurally equatable.
And Type objects are singletons, so typeof(int) == typeof(int) is true.
> The system will always provide the derived class RuntimeType. In reflection, all classes beginning with the word Runtime are created only once per object in the system and support comparison operations.
and
> A Type object that represents a type is unique; that is, two Type object references refer to the same object if and only if they represent the same type. This allows for comparison of Type objects using reference equality.
I'm employed by company A, but for the past year have been part of a project in company B. She's been at company A for a while, but now she's joining us at the Company B project.
Topologically speaking it's just one hole, yes, but if, say, you plugged one end of the straw - does it have a hole? If you plug one end and then cut open a hole on the side - mathemtically, it will still only have one hole, but non-mathemtically, you've obviously closed one hole and opened another while leaving a different one intact.
We had a discussion about it on twitter a couple of months ago - about how for most non-mathematicians, a donut has 1 hole and a straw has 2 holes, even though they're topologically identical.
My stance was that in a donut, the hole is a specific and easy to see thing. It's a hole. It's the hole.
For a straw, the "hole" is the entire length of the straw, so we don't intuitively grasp it as as a hole, because we think of it as "the inside", not "the hole".
If you're doing mathematical topography, then a straw has one hole. If you're trying drink out of one, it makes sense to talk about two different holes.
Just like a tomato.
If you're talking about biological classifications, it makes sense to talk about a tomato as a fruit. If you're making fruit salad, it does not.
what prevents you from using a tomato in a fruit salad amounts to experience, not the understanding that the word "tomato" can have multiple contextual interpretations
@Neil Yes, but as the saying goes, "a little knowledge is a dangerous thing", and I've had oh-so-many discussions with people who, once they learned of the biological classification of tomatoes, derived perverse enjoyment out of correcting people that tomatoes are, technically, a fruit. As if "technically" somehow means "more correctly".
What about this.. a guy (lets call hiim guy A) goes in for a job interview and sits down to a another (guy B) who seems to be dressed sharply and seems to be focused on getting the job. Guy B pulls out his "lucky" silver dollar and says it brings him luck. Guy A thinks to himself, "The guy with the silver dollar is surely going to get this job." Guy A ends up getting the job and Guy B doesn't. Guy A later finds to his surprise that he himself had a silver dollar in his pocket.
So his original affirmation that "The guy with the silver dollar is surely going to get this job" was wrong or right?
If you can think of a "compilation step", as it were, that resolves the statement into "Guy B will get the job" when it is thought, then the new knowledge changes nothing.
The affirmation wasn't "Guys with silver dollars will always get the job".
What about this.. a guy (lets call hiim guy A) goes in for a job interview and sits down to a another (guy B) who seems to be dressed sharply and seems to be focused on getting the job. Guy B pulls out his "lucky" silver dollar and says it brings him luck. Guy A thinks to himself, "The guy with the silver dollar is surely going to get this job." Guy A ends up getting the job and Guy B doesn't. Guy A later finds to his surprise that he himself had a silver dollar in his pocket.
it is being used as identification, but that's not strictly a rule.. you can say "the guy with blonde hair is surely going to get this job" and maybe there are 5 people in a room with blonde hair and 5 without blonde hair
@Wietlol that doesn't change anything.. it'd be like saying "the guy with blonde hair will surely get the job" when guy A and guy B both have blonde hair
it wasn't his intended meaning admittedly, but that's the point
he unwittingly thought a truth without having the proper context for understanding that truth
@CaptainSquirrel Hmm. I don't think it has anything to do with roslyn. I haven't used MVC/Razor much, but it probably uses some sort of namespace-prefixes for the HTML it generates.
It tries to resolve the x.Firstname to give it a name, but either there's a collision with some other type or something like that, and it uses the containing type name too.
if I say "whenever it rains, I'll bring an umbrella" and the day in which you don't think it rains, you bring an umbrella, that statement still holds true
wether or not the statement is incorrect or ambiguous doesnt matter, as long as the person who made the statement has a correct and unambiguous interpretation
If Neil sits next to me, I say "the guy sitting next to me will get the job", then Neil gets up and Wietlol sits next to me, then Wietlol gets the job - I meant "Neil will get the job" and was wrong, but "the guy sitting next to me will get the job" was right.
The main issue is that you can't determine truth, because my statement "X will get the job" isn't a statement of truth, it's a prediction, and isn't true in any sense at that point.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan fine, so if Guy A had said that the guy with the silver dollar probably has a great sex life, since it's true in the present, he could be unwittingly giving a truth
I don't think anything changes the fact that it is a prediction or not
@Neil It does, because a prediction's truth value is indeterminable. If you revisit a prediction after the fact, you're recontextualizing it, and its this recontextualization which gives it a truth value.
> The CS$<>8__locals1 portion of the name in the original description appears when the compiler generates more than one class for delegates and they reference each other.
@CaptainSquirrel So I'm guessing your merge made some changes in some anonymous lambdas which cause duplicates which need to be resolved with the class name as prefix.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan ok, then you admit that if guy A had said something which can be proven true or false in the now, that it is then a truth and not a prediction, even if guy A did not intend on that truth
if he inadvertently referred to himself to something which can be proven true or false in the now, then you say the problem goes away? I don't think it does
If the employer had already made up his decision and put it in an envelope, the choice has been made. Guy A can still make that affirmation that the guy with the silver dollar will get the job
It is a truth which can be verified, no longer a prediction