Tutorial by Examples: g

Arrow functions are lexically scoped; this means that their this Binding is bound to the context of the surrounding scope. That is to say, whatever this refers to can be preserved by using an arrow function. Take a look at the following example. The class Cow has a method that allows for it to pr...
Arrow functions do not expose an arguments object; therefore, arguments would simply refer to a variable in the current scope. const arguments = [true]; const foo = x => console.log(arguments[0]); foo(false); // -> true Due to this, arrow functions are also not aware of their caller/ca...
Use Spliterators.spliterator() or Spliterators.spliteratorUnknownSize() to convert an iterator to a stream: Iterator<String> iterator = Arrays.asList("A", "B", "C").iterator(); Spliterator<String> spliterator = Spliterators.spliteratorUnknownSize(itera...
To initialize a static final fields that require using more than a single expression, a static initializer can be used to assign the value. The following example initializes a unmodifiable set of Strings: public class MyClass { public static final Set<String> WORDS; static {...
It is possible to create a set of variables that can act similar to an array (although they are not an actual array object) by using spaces in the SET statement: @echo off SET var=A "foo bar" 123 for %%a in (%var%) do ( echo %%a ) echo Get the variable directly: %var% Result: ...
You can enhance your own classes with generics just like NSArray or NSDictionary. @interface MyClass<__covariant T> @property (nonnull, nonatomic, strong, readonly) NSArray<T>* allObjects; - (void) addObject:(nonnull T)obj; @end
The format statement applies the given format to the specified variable for display purposes only, i.e. the underlying value does not change. data example1 ; Date = '02AUG2016'd ; /* stored as a SAS date, i.e. a number */ Date2 = '31AUG2016'd ; format Date monyy7. Date2 yymmddn8. ; run...
In order to be able to work with C structs as Ruby objects, you need to wrap them with calls to Data_Wrap_Struct and Data_Get_Struct. Data_Wrap_Struct wraps a C data structure in a Ruby object. It takes a pointer to your data structure, along with a few pointers to callback functions, and returns a...
When working with XAML, using a centralized Style allows you to update a set of styled views from one place. All the idiom and platform adjustements can also be integrated to your styles. <Style TargetType="StackLayout"> <Setter Property="Padding"> <Setter...
You can create custom views that can be integrated to your page thanks to those adjustment tools. Select File > New > File... > Forms > Forms ContentView (Xaml) and create a view for each specific layout : TabletHome.xamland PhoneHome.xaml. Then select File > New > File... > F...
Creating variables in VBScript can be done by using the Dim, Public, or Private statement. It is best practice to put at the top of the script "Option Explicit" which forces you to explicitly define a variable. You can declare one variable like this: Option Explicit Dim firstName O...
Here are some ways to set variables: You can set a variable to a specific, string, number, date using SET EX: SET @var_string = 'my_var'; SET @var_num = '2' SET @var_date = '2015-07-20'; you can set a variable to be the result of a select statement using := EX: Select @var := '123'; (...
It's a better experience to open split below and on right set it using set splitbelow set splitright
Assume you want to delegate to a class but you do not want to provide the delegated-to class in the constructor parameter. Instead, you want to construct it privately, making the constructor caller unaware of it. At first this might seem impossible because class delegation allows to delegate only to...
Gson does not support inheritance out of the box. Let's say we have the following class hierarchy: public class BaseClass { int a; public int getInt() { return a; } } public class DerivedClass1 extends BaseClass { int b; @Override public int getI...
Struct defines new classes with the specified attributes and accessor methods. Person = Struct.new :first_name, :last_name You can then instantiate objects and use them: person = Person.new 'John', 'Doe' # => #<struct Person first_name="John", last_name="Doe"> p...
Person = Struct.new :name do def greet(someone) "Hello #{someone}! I am #{name}!" end end Person.new('Alice').greet 'Bob' # => "Hello Bob! I am Alice!"
The first thing to do is to add the service to AndroidManifest.xml, inside the <application> tag: <application ...> ... <service android:name=".RecordingService" <!--"enabled" tag specifies Whether or not the service can ...
List comprehensions can introduce local bindings for variables to hold some interim values: [(x,y) | x <- [1..4], let y=x*x+1, even y] -- [(1,2),(3,10)] Same effect can be achieved with a trick, [(x,y) | x <- [1..4], y <- [x*x+1], even y] -- [(1,2),(3,10)] The let in list compr...
// circle objects: { x:, y:, radius: } // return true if the 2 circles are colliding // c1 and c2 are circles as defined above function CirclesColliding(c1,c2){ var dx=c2.x-c1.x; var dy=c2.y-c1.y; var rSum=c1.radius+c2.radius; return(dx*dx+dy*dy<=rSum*rSum); }

Page 364 of 693