[Yaazarai (FatalSleep)] Quick question: Where can I find info on the DelegateExtensions class? Someone recommended using it to write an invocation extension method.
Would it be more advantageous to have a look-up array uint128s of dimensions 81x128 with a lot of repeated entries, or to try to reduce the size of the array to 81x16 by figuring out a perfect hashing function that goes from 7 bits to 4 bits?
The latter one takes up 1/8th the total space in memory, but involves extra instructions to perform the hashing
the sorted() demands a Comparator<Movie>, which it gets from comparing()
however, if you chain comparing() with another function, like thenComparing() then sorted() demands a Comparator<Movie> from thenComparing() and it will lose the inference on comparing()
The server sends a response http status code like 301 (moved permanently) or 302 (found/moved temporarily), so the browser looks at a possible location-header. When the server sent a location-header, the browser automatically calls the website from the location header.
yes, which is fine for the few examples that they show in "hello world", but as soon as you step out of the "hello world" domain, you immediately have to provide your own classes for comparers to compare stuff
and lambdas just stop being useful
because you need a comparer
and you cannot make a comparer because it is missing the comparer builder (comparingBy() function stuff)
if you want to receive the order rules via a parameter for example, you cant ask for a series of lambdas
you have to either 1, ask for a list of lambdas and reduce them with OrderBy calls (and figure out how to do the descending part) 2, ask for a lambda to convert your IEnumerable to a sorted IEnumerable 3, use IComparer
I mean, if you want to pass that .OrderBy(m => m.Title).ThenBy(m => m.Actors.Count) as parameter, how would you do that?
public void Foo(IList<Movie> movies, dynamic sortingRules)
{
var sorted = movies.OrderBy(sortingRules).ToList();
what type would sortingRules have?
and what value would it have?
or what function would you use instead of OrderBy()?
well "toob" is still not entirely correct, more like "tioob" or "tjoob" depending on how the prnounciation-grammar works lik
Like any other tube
The only time tube is pronounced like toob was in call of duty, when we needed a derogatory term for people using an underbarrel grenade launcher to it's the noob toob
@Squirrelkiller: As far as I know, redirections make a web browser to send HTTP GET to the server that issues the redirections. My question, is it possible to do redirection but the web browser send HTTP POST instead of GET?
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@Squirrelkiller Submitting form values via POST request is not what I am interested in. I want the server to redirect the user to send HTTP POST to the server without user intervention as if the user click submit button. :-) It is not possible I think!
Servers can redirect user to submit HTTP GET to the server. Is it posible the server to redirect user to submit HTTP POST to the server without having to ask user to press submit button? It is what I want to know. I think it is not possible because of security issue maybe!
The communication I want to achieve is as follows:
1. Client sends HTTP GET to server 2. Server sends response to client. The response makes client send HTTP POST without user intervention (user don't know the web browser send HTTP POST to server)
This is the scenario I want to know. :-)
If it is not possible, the discussion ends. Thank you very much!
Oh my ghost, apparently when redirection occurs, the GET request sent by the client will be responded by the server only with header without body. I learnt something new today!
anyone know how to PushStreamContent through an HttpResponse? Because I keep seeing "'Request' does not exist in the current context" when trying to set httpresponse to Request.CreateResponse().