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After reading these, I have become extra nice to my family!
*************************
I told you I was sick
B P ROBERTS
May 17, 1929
June 18, 1979
***************
Here rests
Pancrazio Juvenales
1968-1993
He was a good husband,
a wonderful father,
but a bad electrician
*****************
GUSTAVO
GUMERSINDA
GUTIERREZ
GUZMAN
1934-1989
Rest in Peace
A memory from all your sons (except Ricardo who did not pay any money)
*********************
Here is resting
my dearest wife
BRUNJILDA
JALAMONTE
Lord, Please welcome her with
the same joy I send her to you
************************
TOMAS
JIMOTEO
CHINCHILLA
Rest in Peace,
Now you are in Lord's arms
Lord, watch your wallet
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I was dead to the world this morning and told my wife to put "Ronnie went Nigh Nigh" on my headstone.
Fancy I should see this today.
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JOHN
JENKINS
May 30 1954
Jan 23 2010
Died from not forwarding that email to 10 people.
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I am the only one that thinks the C# intellisense is terrible? I remember back when I did VB.NET and intellisence was great. Visual Studio needs to step up and get this crap fixed. I had red "underlines" everywhere in my C# project and couldn't figure out why. I recompiled the code, they all went away and everything was good. So in order to get rid of
errors you have to compile? I love C# but the intellisence and errors it detects pisses me off
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It may have something to do with DLLs you would have referenced in your code.
"Bastards encourage idiots to use Oracle Forms, Web Forms, Access and a number of other dinky web publishing tolls.", Mycroft Holmes[ ^]
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Happens to me all the time. I don't think it has anything to do with the language (though, I can't be certain of that). More likely, it's the specific version of Visual Studio and/or the project you are working with.
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That's one thing that is great about vb.net. It compiles in the background all the time and evertime you break you get instant feedback from the error list. I don't know how they do it though but it really felt more intuitive with vb.net
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All this is true of C# too, there is no difference between the languages when it comes to background compiling
There is nothing to see here, move along
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no. (at least not up until VS2010, can't tell about VS2012+) If you add an additional parameter to a method in vb.net every place in all the projects of the solution where this method is used pops up instantly in the error window and notify you about the error. In c# you have to run the build process manually to get those messages to appear. If you have made a few changes you're not unlikely to rebuild the solution for multiple times (which can consume quite an amount of time for solutions with many projects and lots of code) making fixing errors more tedious.
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Ah yes, I can confirm that is still true is VS2012... never thought about it before so I guess it doesn't bother me at all.
More efficient this way I would say
There is nothing to see here, move along
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rriegel wrote: I had red "underlines" everywhere in my C# You often find this when updating some code and the source file has not been saved, so the background compilation is working on the uncorrected code. It's usually the fault of the developer rather than anything inherent in C#.
Veni, vidi, abiit domum
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I am doing VB.Net now and wish I was using C#, well all sorts I suppose...
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There's something very wrong in your setup - it works perfectly for most of us.
C++ intellisense, by contrast, is a dog. I blame the language though - its incredibly hard to parse 1000's of lines of code (from headers) of a language that isn't context-free and update the intelli-suggestions in real-time.
"If you don't fail at least 90 percent of the time, you're not aiming high enough."
Alan Kay.
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Yes, the intellisense works much better in VB. It's interesting that it can't be the same in C#.
There are only 10 types of people in the world, those who understand binary and those who don't.
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After February 14, those Astrology/Love/Black Magic spam will stop. They will find for another topic to advertise because what they have chosen is seasonal.
Oh, and BTW, Happy Valentines Day* CPians!
*Asian Time.
Don't mind those people who say you're not HOT. At least you know you're COOL.
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Right said, too much of hype around 14th and all these will set aside from tomorrow.
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Today the Spammers r spamming the General Indian Topics community..
CP members..
Happy V-Day!!!
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Don't worry, it's already reported in the Spam and Abuse Watch.
Don't mind those people who say you're not HOT. At least you know you're COOL.
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I see they are spammin Lounge today too...is there are any way these guys can be blocked????
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Alert Level: 1 (Highest)
FlashBlock is actually malware.[^]
Everyone is advised to remove this unethical extension as soon as possible.
<voice type="Ebeneezer Scrooge"> Bah. dumb bugs </voice>
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I loved the removal instructions (my comments in brackets)
1. Uninstall Flashblock
(OK, that should do it)
2. Remove Flashblock add-on/extension
(I just removed it - where has it gone?)
3. Scan computer for Malware (Automatically remove Flashblock malware)
(OK, no viruses, and even if I had not removed Flashblock it would not be detected as a virus)
4. System Restore (Troubleshoot/Remove recently installed programs)
(Argh! Flashblock is back!)
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The patience and attention to detail to put something like this[^] together. While I might not care about the story, I can't but help be impressed by the actual film making.
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I bet it was shot in Notlob!
MVVM # - I did it My Way
___________________________________________
Man, you're a god. - walterhevedeich 26/05/2011
.\\axxx
(That's an 'M')
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Working on a small app to process input files, generate output files for insertion into a third-party system. Boiler plate stuff.
Get a list of files to be processed using a search pattern, and, to my dismay, the function returns too many file. Hmmm... there is a known bug from Redmond that doesn't appear to be addressed.
Search for the issue and find an article in CodeProject that describes the issue and provides a code snippet that addresses it.
Copied, tested, implemented.
Thank you CodeProject and community for once again filling the gap that exists.
The article has not been mentioned because this message could apply to any number of articles or any number of members, but a comment was left for the author to read.
Tim
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