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  • How to do svn ignore on a single file?

    - by Zando
    I know it's a basic question but I've tried every combination of propedit propset, etc. In an existing project, there's a file (let's call it 'error.log) I want to ignore for all future commits. What's the command-line syntax to do so?

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  • How do I rescue from a `require': no such file to load in ruby?

    - by René Nyffenegger
    I am trying to rescue from a `require': no such file to load in ruby in order to hint the user at specifying the -I flag in case he has forgotten to do so. Basically the code looks like: begin require 'someFile.rb' rescue puts "someFile.rb was not found, have you" puts "forgotten to specify the -I flag?" exit end I have expected the rescue part to take over execution in case someFile.rb was not found, but my assumption was wrong.

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  • What is the smallest Windows header I can #include to define DWORD?

    - by j_random_hacker
    I have a small header file of my own which declares a couple of functions, one of which has a return type of DWORD. I'm reluctant to drag in windows.h just to get the official definition of this type since that file is huge, and my header will be used in a number of source modules that don't otherwise need it. Of course, in practice I know that DWORD is just unsigned int, but I'd prefer the more hygienic approach of including an official header file if possible. On this page it says that DWORD is defined in windef.h, but unfortunately including just this small file directly leads to compilation errors -- apparently it expects to be included by other headers. (Also, the fact that my file is a header file also means I can't just declare WIN32_LEAN_AND_MEAN, since the source file that #includes my file might need this to be left undefined.) Any ideas? I know it's not the end of the world -- I can just continue to #include <windows.h> -- but thought someone might have a better idea!

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  • Using XSLT, how can I produce a table with elements at the position of the the node's attributes?

    - by Dr. Sbaitso
    Given the following XML: <items> <item> <name>A</name> <address>0</address> <start>0</start> <size>2</size> </item> <item> <name>B</name> <address>1</address> <start>2</start> <size>4</size> </item> <item> <name>C</name> <address>2</address> <start>5</start> <size>2</size> </item> </items> I want to generate the following output including colspan's +---------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+ | Address | 7 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 | +---------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+ | 0 | | | | | | | A | +---------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+ | 1 | | | B | | | +---------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+ | 2 | | C | | | | | | +---------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+ | 3 | | | | | | | | | +---------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+ I think I would be able to accomplish this with a mutable xslt variable, but alas, there's no such thing. Is it even possible? How?

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  • How do I delete the first line in a file?

    - by Soop
    I can't search for a particular string, since they're all very similar, but I'd like something simple to chop out the first 4 lines in a file. They're all variable length too. I've had a a think about perl, and it all seems harder than I thought, but I'd like to do it in Perl, AWK or a shell command if possible. Does anybody have a simple way of doing this?

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  • Could this C cast to avoid a signed/unsigned comparison make any sense?

    - by sharptooth
    I'm reviewing a C++ project and see effectively the following: std::vector<SomeType> objects; //then later int size = (int)objects.size(); for( int i = 0; i < size; ++i ) { process( objects[i] ); } Here's what I see. std::vector::size() returns size_t that can be of some size not related to the size of int. Even if sizeof(int) == sizeof(size_t) int is signed and can't hold all possible values of size_t. So the code above could only process the lower part of a very long vector and contains a bug. That said I'm curious of why the author might have written this? My only guess is that first he omitted the (int) cast and the compiler emitted something like Visual C++ C4018 warning: warning C4018: '<' : signed/unsigned mismatch so the author though that the best way to avoid the compiler warning would be to simply cast the size_t to int thus making the compiler shut up. Is there any other possible sane reason for that C cast?

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  • how to save Audiorecorded file to another location? i m trying but i got exception...

    - by rakesh-bhatt99
    NSString recordFile = [NSTemporaryDirectory() stringByAppendingPathComponent: (NSString)inRecordFile]; NSArray *docPaths=NSSearchPathForDirectoriesInDomains(NSDocumentDirectory,NSUserDomainMask,YES); NSString docDir=[[docPaths objectAtIndex:0]stringByAppendingPathComponent: (NSString)inRecordFile]; url = CFURLCreateWithString(kCFAllocatorDefault, (CFStringRef)docPaths, NULL); // create the audio file XThrowIfError(AudioFileCreateWithURL(url, kAudioFileCAFType, &mRecordFormat, kAudioFileFlags_EraseFile, &mRecordFile), "AudioFileCreateWithURL failed"); CFRelease(url);

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  • two view controllers and reusability with delegate

    - by netcharmer
    Newbie question about design patterns in objC. I'm writing a functionality for my iphone app which I plan to use in other apps too. The functionality is written over two classes - Viewcontroller1 and Viewcontroller2. Viewcontroller1 is the root view of a navigation controller and it can push Viewcontroller2. Rest of the app will use only ViewController1 and will never access Viewcontroller2 directly. However, triggered by user events, Viewcontroller2 has to send a message to the rest of the app. My question is what is the best way of achieving it? Currently, I use two level of delegation to send the message out from Viewcontroller2. First send it to Viewcontroller1 and then let Viewcontroller1 send it to rest of the app or the application delegate. So my code looks like - //Viewcontroller1.h @protocol bellDelegate -(int)bellRang:(int)size; @end @interface Viewcontroller1 : UITableViewController <dummydelegate> { id <bellDelegate> delegate; @end //Viewcontroller1.m @implementation Viewcontroller1 -(void)viewDidLoad { //some stuff here Viewcontroller2 *vc2 = [[Viewcontroller2 alloc] init]; vc2.delegate = self; [self.navigationController pushViewController:vc2 animated:YES]; } -(int)dummyBell:(int)size { return([self.delegate bellRang:size]); } //Viewcontroller2.h @protocol dummyDelegate -(int)dummyBell:(int)size; @end @interface Viewcontroller2 : UITableViewController { id <dummyDelegate> delegate; @end //Viewcontroller2.m @implementation Viewcontroller2 -(int)eventFoo:(int)size { rval = [self.delegate dummyBell:size]; } @end

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