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Add an accessory view above the keyboard. This is commonly used for adding next/previous buttons, or additional buttons like Done/Submit (especially for the number/phone/decimal pad keyboard types which don't have a built-in return key). Swift let textField = UITextField() // initialized however ...
Given the following CSV file: Id,Name 1,"Joel" 2,"Adam" 3,"Ryan" 4,"Matt" You can read the data with the following script: #r "FSharp.Data.dll" open FSharp.Data type PeopleDB = CsvProvider<"people.csv"> let people = Pe...
BEGIN UPDATE Employees SET PhoneNumber = '5551234567' WHERE Id = 1; UPDATE Employees SET Salary = 650 WHERE Id = 3; END
String concatenation can be performed using the + operator. For example: String s1 = "a"; String s2 = "b"; String s3 = "c"; String s = s1 + s2 + s3; // abc Normally a compiler implementation will perform the above concatenation using methods involving a StringBui...
0.18.0 Prior to 0.18.0 you can create ranges like this: > range = [1..5] [1,2,3,4,5] : List number > > negative = [-5..3] [-5,-4,-3,-2,-1,0,1,2,3] : List number 0.18.0 In 0.18.0 The [1..5] syntax has been removed. > range = List.range 1 5 [1,2,3,4,5] : List number > &g...
> listOfNumbers = [1,4,99] [1,4,99] : List number > > listOfStrings = ["Hello","World"] ["Hello","World"] : List String > > emptyList = [] -- can be anything, we don't know yet [] : List a > Under the hood, List (linked list) is ...
> ourList = [1,2,3,4,5] [1,2,3,4,5] : List number > > firstElement = List.head ourList Just 1 : Maybe Int > > allButFirst = List.tail ourList Just [2,3,4,5] : Maybe (List Int) This wrapping into Maybe type happens because of the following scenario: What should List.head ret...
List.map : (a -> b) -> List a -> List b is a higher-order function that applies a one-parameter function to each element of a list, returning a new list with the modified values. import String ourList : List String ourList = ["wubba", "lubba", "dub",...
List.filter : (a -> Bool) -> List a -> List a is a higher-order function which takes a one-parameter function from any value to a boolean, and applies that function to every element of a given list, keeping only those elements for which the function returns True on. The function that List.f...
def numberOrCharacterSwitch(toggleNumber: Boolean)(number: Int)(character: Char): String = if (toggleNumber) number.toString else character.toString // need to explicitly specify the type of the parameter to be curried // resulting function signature Boolean => String val switchBetween3A...
def minus(left: Int, right: Int) = left - right val numberMinus5 = minus(_: Int, 5) val fiveMinusNumber = minus(5, _: Int) numberMinus5(7) // 2 fiveMinusNumber(7) // -2
To create a collection of n copies of some object x, use the fill method. This example creates a List, but this can work with other collections for which fill makes sense: // List.fill(n)(x) scala > List.fill(3)("Hello World") res0: List[String] = List(Hello World, Hello World, Hello...
Some JavaScript engines (for example, the current version of Node.js and older versions of Chrome before Ignition+turbofan) don't run the optimizer on functions that contain a try/catch block. If you need to handle exceptions in performance-critical code, it can be faster in some cases to keep the ...
Use .slice() to extract substrings given two indices: var s = "0123456789abcdefg"; s.slice(0, 5); // "01234" s.slice(5, 6); // "5" Given one index, it will take from that index to the end of the string: s.slice(10); // "abcdefg"
Use .split to go from strings to an array of the split substrings: var s = "one, two, three, four, five" s.split(", "); // ["one", "two", "three", "four", "five"] Use the array method .join to go back to a string: s.split(&...
All JavaScript strings are unicode! var s = "some ∆≈ƒ unicode ¡™£¢¢¢"; s.charCodeAt(5); // 8710 There are no raw byte or binary strings in JavaScript. To effectively handle binary data, use Typed Arrays.
To detect whether a parameter is a primitive string, use typeof: var aString = "my string"; var anInt = 5; var anObj = {}; typeof aString === "string"; // true typeof anInt === "string"; // false typeof anObj === "string"; // false If you ev...
This demonstrates how to print each element of a Map val map = Map(1 -> "a", 2 -> "b") for (number <- map) println(number) // prints (1,a), (2,b) for ((key, value) <- map) println(value) // prints a, b This demonstrates how to print each element of a list val l...
Full example code included at the end Windows components for OpenGL WGL WGL (can be pronounced wiggle) stands for "Windows-GL", as in "an interface between Windows and OpenGL" - a set of functions from the Windows API to communicate with OpenGL. WGL functions have a wgl prefix...
var MyDict = new Dictionary<string,T>(StringComparison.InvariantCultureIgnoreCase)

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