Tutorial by Examples: chaining

The left-hand operand must be nullable, while the right-hand operand may or may not be. The result will be typed accordingly. Non-nullable int? a = null; int b = 3; var output = a ?? b; var type = output.GetType(); Console.WriteLine($"Output Type :{type}"); Console.WriteLine($&q...
Many LINQ functions both operate on an IEnumerable<TSource> and also return an IEnumerable<TResult>. The type parameters TSource and TResult may or may not refer to the same type, depending on the method in question and any functions passed to it. A few examples of this are public stat...
The then method of a promise returns a new promise. const promise = new Promise(resolve => setTimeout(resolve, 5000)); promise // 5 seconds later .then(() => 2) // returning a value from a then callback will cause // the new promise to resolve with this value .then...
The pipe operator, %>%, is used to insert an argument into a function. It is not a base feature of the language and can only be used after attaching a package that provides it, such as magrittr. The pipe operator takes the left-hand side (LHS) of the pipe and uses it as the first argument of the ...
Method Chaining is a technique explained in Martin Fowler's book Domain Specific Languages. Method Chaining is summarized as Makes modifier methods return the host object, so that multiple modifiers can be invoked in a single expression. Consider this non-chaining/regular piece of code (ported...
Pipes may be chained. <p>Today is {{ today | date:'fullDate' | uppercase}}.</p>
You can use Optional Chaining in order to call a method, access a property or subscript an optional. This is done by placing a ? between the given optional variable and the given member (method, property or subscript). struct Foo { func doSomething() { print("Hello World!") ...
A Value Converter can be used alongside other value converters and you can infinitely chain them using the | pipe separator. ${myString | toUppercase | removeCharacters:'&,%,-,+' | limitTo:25} The above theoretical example firstly applies toUppercase which capitalizes our string. Then it app...
When an extension method returns a value that has the same type as its this argument, it can be used to "chain" one or more method calls with a compatible signature. This can be useful for sealed and/or primitive types, and allows the creation of so-called "fluent" APIs if the me...
Method chaining is a programming strategy that simplifies your code and beautifies it. Method chaining is done by ensuring that each method on an object returns the entire object, instead of returning a single element of that object. For example: function Door() { this.height = ''; this.w...
Stream is especially useful when you want to run multiple operations on a collection. This is because Stream is lazy and only does one iteration (whereas Enum would do multiple iterations, for example). numbers = 1..100 |> Stream.map(fn(x) -> x * 2 end) |> Stream.filter(fn(x) -> rem(x...
Any lodash collection method has two syntaxes. Without chaining: var arr1 = [10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 15, 25, 35]; var arr2 = _.filter(arr1, function(item){ return item % 10 === 5 }); // arr2 now contains [15, 25, 15, 25, 35] var arr3 = _.uniq(arr2); // arr3 now contains [15, 25, 35] var arr...
.message color: white background: black .message-important @extend .message font-weight: bold .message-error @extend .message-important font-style: italic This code causes .message-error to extend from .message-important, which means that it will contain code from both .me...
Coroutines can yield inside themselves, and wait for other coroutines. So, you can chain sequences - "one after the other". This is very easy, and is a basic, core, technique in Unity. It's absolutely natural in games that certain things have to happen "in order". Almost every...
With methods in golang you can do method "chaining" passing pointer to method and returning pointer to the same struct like this: package main import ( "fmt" ) type Employee struct { Name string Age int Rank int } func (empl *Employee) Promote() *...
Use itertools.chain to create a single generator which will yield the values from several generators in sequence. from itertools import chain a = (x for x in ['1', '2', '3', '4']) b = (x for x in ['x', 'y', 'z']) ' '.join(chain(a, b)) Results in: '1 2 3 4 x y z' As an alternate constructo...
You can use method chaining while working with JSONObject and JSONArray. JSONObject example JSONObject obj = new JSONObject();//Initialize an empty JSON object //Before: {} obj.put("name","Nikita").put("age","30").put("isMarried","true&quot...
When testing for any of several equality comparisons: if a == 3 or b == 3 or c == 3: it is tempting to abbreviate this to if a or b or c == 3: # Wrong This is wrong; the or operator has lower precedence than ==, so the expression will be evaluated as if (a) or (b) or (c == 3):. The correct w...
Chaining and Chainable is a design methodology used to design object behaviors so that calls to object functions return references to self, or another object, providing access to additional function calls allowing the calling statement to chain together many calls without the need to reference the v...
Chaining assignments as part of a var declaration will create global variables unintentionally. For example: (function foo() { var a = b = 0; })() console.log('a: ' + a); console.log('b: ' + b); Will result in: Uncaught ReferenceError: a is not defined 'b: 0' In the above examp...

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