C# Winform. What i want to happen is basically, dynamically add items to a lisview control. At the end of the row is a "remove" button that when clicked, removes that row from the lv.
@JayzeeNSI If you want to publish an app with literally all DLLs included, you need to use dotnet core and publish the app as "platform independant", so even system DLLs get published.
Without clicken the link: if you pass, you're stupid?
Gotta correct myself. After clicking the link: It's actually helpful for some people. And they don't collect or send any data. Pure frontend javascript application that processes yes/no answers to questions about your symptoms.
@nyconing That's advice that absolutely does not apply on for the Netherlands
I entered the symptoms of the flu and it told me to go see the doctor right now.
Cough -> No, Cold -> No, Diarrhea -> Yes, Sorethroat -> No, Body Aches -> Yes, Headache -> Yes, Fever -> No, Breathing Difficulty -> No, Fatigue -> Yes, Travel -> No, Area Infected -> Yes, Direct Contact -> No
Different countries are organized differently. I guess the USA has enough capacity to send out ambulances to everyone and test everyone? The Netherlands does not.
The Dutch equivalent of WHO recommends you contact only when you have 38 degrees fever AND a cough, OR emergency situation (breathing difficulties). Have flu symptoms, cold syomptoms, whatever? Stay home and rest.
My town is currently working on getting a CORVID-Drive-Through set up. For exactly this kind of stuff. You got some symptoms but not really an emergency or just maybe COVID19? Go to the drive through and get testet!
I mean, if you have the flu currently your immune system is encumbered anyway, so it's probably a good idea to get tested before any too serious symptoms appear.
Sure if there's capacity to test everyone. That's the rub. The Netherlands for example, does NOT have that capacity right now. And COVID-19 can cause the exact same symptoms as the flu.
Besides... if you have flu-like symptoms and you would be theoretically tested to have COVID-19, nothing would change here. Unless you need medical help, you're told to stay at home to rest and recover.
@Squirrelkiller It was at capacity. Everyone that had some symptom would want to get tested, even though the next step would be the same: stay at home and recover, call if you need medical help. Now it's getting better. We're scaling up testing capacity and the curve is not exponentially growing anymore. The next step is testing everyone working on health care. Once they can do that, they'll start testing more people not related to health care.
Writing a technical spec increases the chances of having a successful project, service, or feature that all stakeholders involved are satisfied with. It decreases the chances of something going horribly wrong during implementation and even after you’ve launched your product.
I have a function that outputs a JSON string. I need to store this in the database in the smallest form possible. I'm looking up text compression routines but is there anything I need to keep in mind to get it as small as I can?
There's not really a point in showing code. I mean, I don't mind, but it's just basicly calling Path.GetRelativePath(string, string). I think the issue might be that my project isn't using the correct .NET core version for it. But no idea how to change that
It's to allow someone to get back into their account when they lost their password. You gonna have to be a bit more specific by what "logic" you're trying to understand
im trying to build that functionality out. im confused on the part where the user clicks on the "reset password" link from their email. gets routed to a GET controller
Because you need to identify the user somehow. The link should include some temporary unique hash to do so. Since you can't send POST request headers through a mail body, GET is the only way
Normally user clicks on forget password. Your system generates the hash and sets an expiration date on it. Say for 1 hour or so. Then sends the link with that hash. User clicks the link, verify hash and time, reset password
Not that I know off. But obviously the hash should be like 32 random alphanumeric characters. No one else should be able to guess the hash and resets someones password without having access to the mail
That's also why you need an expiration time on it. To prevent brute forcing
@Wietlol Do strings have to get to a certain length before GZip starts getting efficient? Right now the unzipped string is 61 characters long and the zipped is 85/
Ok my head is about to explode now so perhaps someone here can help
I have an absolute path, say: C:\Program\CoreFiles\Somedir\file.txt
I need to copy file.txt to C:\Program\Projects\ProjectName\Somedir\file.txt
So moving the file should keep the \Somedir\file.txt path instact. My idea was to get the relative path out the absolute path somehow so I know which folders to create and where to copy the file. But I just cant wrap my head around it
Then I'm back to square one, lol. I don't have all the folders in the target dir. Hence I need to create them based on the path where the file is copied
@mr5 I have to be in that branch when I clone it, right?
I just recently had a new branch created on the git remote server called 'Testing' (this was done through the admin account, not my own). The other devs are doing their pull requests to that branch now. I'm trying to create a Testing branch on my own machine that I can pull from that remote branch and then merge into my Working branch. Can someone help me with this?