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In practice I’d put the class in a distinctive namespace to avoid conflicts in the case where someone else has had the same idea.
For example, if you throw a dice and it comes up 6, people often think that the chances of it coming up 6 again are reduces – when of course they’re …
Occasional thoughts on .net development.
Often, when we're trying to represent a sequence, it may be unbounded, or at least: open-ended - for example, we could be pulling data from a remote …
But seeing the solution written both ways I got to wondering if there was a performance benefit one way or the other.
Think "all of the people who's name starts with D" or "all of the invoices with "CREDIT" in the description".
Which array your item is in is determined with the hash code.
find a user that's known to be in the database.
If this is you, and you either can't get the DBAs to give you that access, or you don't want to be running migrations on a database with other import…