Tutorial by Examples: i

If you don't have permissions to install perl modules, you may still install them manually, indicating a custom path where you've got writing permissions. Fist, download and unzip module archive: wget module.tar.gz tar -xzf module.tar.gz cd module Then, if the module distribution contains a M...
All values in Rust have exactly one owner. The owner is responsible for dropping that value when it goes out of scope, and is the only one who may move the ownership of the value. The owner of a value may give away references to it by letting other pieces of code borrow that value. At any given time...
All values in Rust have a lifetime. A value's lifetime spans the segment of code from the value is introduced to where it is moved, or the end of the containing scope { let x = String::from("hello"); // + // ... : let y = S...
Most of the questions around ownership come up when writing functions. When you specify the types of a function's arguments, you may choose how that value is passed in. If you only need read-only access, you can take an immutable reference: fn foo(x: &String) { // foo is only authorized to...
Some Rust types implement the Copy trait. Types that are Copy can be moved without owning the value in question. This is because the contents of the value can simply be copied byte-for-byte in memory to produce a new, identical value. Most primitives in Rust (bool, usize, f64, etc.) are Copy. let x...
After Successfully installing Xamarin Studio on OS X. It's time for the first Hello World Application. Hello World Application: Xamarin.Forms What is Xamarin Forms : Xamarin.Forms is a new library that enables you to build native UIs for iOS, Android and Windows Phone from a single, shared C# c...
def pow = { base, exponent -> base ** exponent } assert pow(3, 2) == 9 def pow2 = pow.curry(2) //base == 2 assert pow2(3) == 8
def dividable = { a, b -> a % b == 0 } assert dividable(2, 3) == false assert dividable(4, 2) == true def even = dividable.rcurry(2) // b == 2 assert even(2) == true assert even(3) == false
def quatNorm = { a, b, c, d -> Math.sqrt(a*a + b*b + c*c + d*d) } assert quatNorm(1, 4, 4, -4) == 7.0 def complexNorm = quatNorm.ncurry(1, 0, 0) // b, c == 0 assert complexNorm(3, 4) == 5.0
def noParam = { "I have $it" } def noParamCurry = noParam.curry(2) assert noParamCurry() == 'I have 2'
def honestlyNoParam = { -> "I Don't have it" } // The following all throw IllegalArgumentException honestlyNoParam.curry('whatever') honestlyNoParam.rcurry('whatever') honestlyNoParam.ncurry(0, 'whatever')
The volatile modifier is used in multi threaded programming. If you declare a field as volatile it is a signal to threads that they must read the most recent value, not a locally cached one. Furthermore, volatile reads and writes are guaranteed to be atomic (access to a non-volatile long or double i...
This example shows how to establish a connection to an SSL-enabled POP3 email server and send a simple (text only) email. // Configure mail provider Properties props = new Properties(); props.put("mail.smtp.host", "smtp.mymailprovider.com"); props.put("ma...
Because generating documentation is based on markdown, you have to do 2 things : 1/ Write your doctest and make your doctest examples clear to improve readability (It is better to give a headline, like "examples" or "tests"). When you write your tests, do not forget to give 4 s...
Once you've installed the .NET CLI tools, you can create a new project with the following command: dotnet new --lang f# This creates a command line program.
Specifies a numeric minimum and maximum range for a property using System.ComponentModel.DataAnnotations; public partial class Enrollment { public int EnrollmentID { get; set; } [Range(0, 4)] public Nullable<decimal> Grade { get; set; } } If we try to insert/upd...
Specifies how the database generates values for the property. There are three possible values: None specifies that the values are not generated by the database. Identity specifies that the column is an identity column, which is typically used for integer primary keys. Computed specifies that th...
By Code-First convention, Entity Framework creates a column for every public property that is of a supported data type and has both a getter and a setter. [NotMapped] annotation must be applied to any properties that we do NOT want a column in a database table for. An example of a property that we ...
[Table("People")] public class Person { public int PersonID { get; set; } public string PersonName { get; set; } } Tells Entity Framework to use a specific table name instead of generating one (i.e. Person or Persons) We can also specify a schema for the table using [T...
public class Person { public int PersonID { get; set; } [Column("NameOfPerson")] public string PersonName { get; set; } } Tells Entity Framework to use a specific column name instead using the name of the property. You can also specify the database data type a...

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