In another question, I saw the following syntax:
#[unset!]
What is that? If I say type? #[unset!] in R3, it tells me unset!, but it doesn't solve the mystery of what #[] is.
So curious.
I understand that an id must be unique within an HTML/XHTML page.
My question is, for a given element, can I assign multiple ids to it?
<div id="nested_element_123 task_123"></div>
I realize I have an easy solution with simply using a class. I'm just curious about using ids in this manner.
I am just trying to better understand the directX pipeline. Just curious if depth buffers are mandatory in order to get things work. Or is it just a buffer you need if you want objects to appear behind one another.
Currently Buildbot does not support multiple repositories. If one desires to have this then separate instances of Buildbot need to be run.
Still I'm curious if anyone has come up with a creative workaround to get this feature working anyway.
Ive used visual studio for years, but the answer this eludes me:
When intellisense pops up, for a method call that takes more than one parameter, the summary for the first parameter is shown. The only way i've found to show the summary for the following parameter(s) is to either supply each parameter or just hit comma until i get the one im looking for.
Ive tried ctrl+right arrow, shift + right arrow etc etc, without success.
Just curious is all.
I have three tables with a common key field, and I need to join them on this key. Given SQLite doesn't have full outer or right joins, I've used the full outer join without right join technique on Wikipedia with much success.
But I'm curious, how would one use this technique to join three tables by a common key? What are the efficiency impacts of this (the current query takes about ten minutes)?
Thanks!
Is there any practical difference between these two extension methods?
class Extensions
{
public static void Foo<T>(this T obj) where T : class { ... }
public static void Foo(this object obj) { ... }
}
I was poking around in Extension Overflow and I came across the first form, which I haven't used before. Curious what the difference is.
I'm using Ninject (1.5 ... soon to be 2) and I'm curious how other people use Ninject or other IoC containers to help wire up events to objects? It seems to me in my code that I'm doing it herky-jerky all over the place and would love some advice on how to clean it up a bit.
What are people doing out there to manage this?
I'm curious if anyone has seen an Open Source radio automation package (I found one in Russian on CodePlex) built on .NET
In addition if I wanted to build something like this in a client server environment is WCF and WPF the best way to do it? Is it fast enough to trigger songs to play/encode on the server from a remote WPF client?
Sort of vague questions but I wanted to get some community feedback.
I am curious? What high fundu logic goes behind not implementing:
result+=vector1;
where both result and vector1 are stl vectors.
Note: i know how to implement that bit, but i need to know what logic, the sages who designed STL were using when they chose not to implement this feature?
I'm building a PHP-based web app for the first time and I haven't found anything to pattern it after. At this point I'm mostly curious about how the files should be arranged into directories so that development of the website can be manageable. This includes javascript scripts, images, stylesheets, cgi scripts, html files, pure php files that define common functions, etc.
Question: Can someone point me to an explanation about how such a website is typically organized on the server?
I have a simple index page for clients. Client has 20 fields. I am displaying list of clients in a table. For this I have to write in my views something like:
- @clients.each do |client|
%tr
%td=client.name
%td=client.email
%td=client.address
%td=client.phone etc...
I am just curious if I can do it something like
- @clients.each do |client|
- client do
%tr
%td= name
%td= email
%td= address
%td= phone etc...
I'm doing some initial research on smart phone development, and I noticed that Android and Windows Mobile both support c++ for application development. I was curious if anyone had any experience trying to manage shared files between both Android and Windows Mobile, and to what extent that code can be shared? e.g. no user interface can be shared, but web service and business logic classes can be shared, etc.
Hi all,
I was curious to know how I can round a number to the nearest tenth. For instance If I had
int a = 59 / 4 /* which would be 14.75 and how can i Store the number as 15 in "a"*/
Thanks,
Dave
I'm curious about infinite numbers in computing, in particular pi.
For a computer to render a circle it would have to understand pi. But how can it if it is infinite?
Am I looking too much into this? Would it just use a rounded value?
Who here is both a musician and a programmer?
I would also be curious to know which instruments you play, the ages at which you started programming and playing music, your personal experiences, etc. Perhaps we can find a relationship between these two things.
I'll begin:
Piano since 10, Computer since 12, I am 21.
Note: Question originally from pheze.myopenid.com.
Related: Jazz Programmer
Hi! Got the following warning output when using GCC 4.5.0 & MinGW.
Warning: .drectve `-aligncomm:___CTOR_LIST__,2 ' unrecognized
Warning: .drectve `-aligncomm:___DTOR_LIST__,2' unrecognized
What does it mean? I guess it's version-specific, because GCC 4.3.4 under cygwin didn't give that warning on the same project.
If anyone had the following output (just curious that's that about), please advise me what to do.
Given a 1*N matrix or an array, how do I find the first 4 elements which have the same value and then store the index for those elements?
PS:
I'm just curious. What if we want to find the first 4 elements whose value differences are within a certain range, say below 2? For example, M=[10,15,14.5,9,15.1,8.5,15.5,9.5], the elements I'm looking for will be 15,14.5,15.1,15.5 and the indices will be 2,3,5,7.
I'm just curious...on the status bar on the home screen and the lock screen, is there a way to change the time that is displayed??? I've been trying to find things on this both in SDK 3.2 and 4 but with no luck.
Thanks for any responses! I really appreciate them :)
This question is, as indicated, for those who use Emacs.
When you do, do you rebind the caps-lock key to CTRL, or do you use the "normal" ctrl key?
I've recently learned some Emacs commands and was using the Visual Studio 2008 emacs commands for a while, and of course I used a caps-rebind tool, but I'm curious how many other people do.
On a side note, the emacs bindings for VS are severely incomplete :(
Hi!
I'm learning C right now and so I'm fiddling about with pointers. Is there a way to determine the word width of the CPU in C because I'm writing a small program which prints it's own stack (Because I'm curious how it is structured), so that information would come in handy. Right now I'm using an int pointer, as an integer is 4 Bytes wide and I'm using a 32-bit Intel Atom CPU.
Thanks in advance, C gurus ;o)
Possible Duplicate:
Why are we using i as a counter in loops
I've used these myself for more than 15 years but cannot really remember how/where I picked up that habit. As it is really widespread, I'm curious to know who originally suggested / recommended using these names for integer loop counters (was it the K&R book?).
Just curious,
Is there any difference between calling len([1,2,3]) or [1,2,3].__len__() ? If there is no apparent difference, what is done differently behind the scenes?
Thanks
I am writing a custom error handling/reporting function for php file upload and I noticed that the error codes returned is one of numbers 0 to 8 except 5.
Is this a typo in the source I am using or is it really this way? And if it is so, I am curious why they have skipped number '5'.
Thanks.