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i want to believe...
Caveat Emptor.
"Progress doesn't come from early risers – progress is made by lazy men looking for easier ways to do things." Lazarus Long
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Soap Box please
Bruno
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Why? I don't my young sister seeing this.
Get me coffee and no one gets hurt!
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Ok, sorry. I was not Aware that political discussions are welcome in the Lounge.
I will leran from day to day
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What is "political" about the WannaCry attack?
Get me coffee and no one gets hurt!
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"Born in the NSA" sung to the tune "Born in the USA"...
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Just found one by chance and wondered if and why those were discontinued?
If the brain were so simple we could understand it, we would be so simple we couldn't. — Lyall Watson
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Probably to stop people trying to solve them by posting them in QA.
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lol - they were really doing that?
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All challenges have been solved. There is nothing new under the sun to learn.
There are two kinds of people in the world: those who can extrapolate from incomplete data.
There are only 10 types of people in the world, those who understand binary and those who don't.
modified 27-Oct-17 15:13pm.
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Could you imagine what the world would be like, if everyone on earth did not repeat the same mistake twice? I can't.
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Experience: Recognizing a mistake the second time you make it.
Arguing with a woman is like reading the Software License Agreement. In the end, you ignore everything and click "I agree".
Anonymous
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Might still be a good experience, compelling enough to give it a third go
Bastard Programmer from Hell
If you can't read my code, try converting it here[^]
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Only twice ?
«While I complain of being able to see only a shadow of the past, I may be insensitive to reality as it is now, since I'm not at a stage of development where I'm capable of seeing it. A few hundred years later another traveler despairing as myself, may mourn the disappearance of what I may have seen, but failed to see.» Claude Levi-Strauss (Tristes Tropiques, 1955)
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No. But then again, I get caught trying to imagine a world without hypotheticals!
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Daily challenge: Fix more bugs than I create.
The coding challenges will resume on Monday! Enjoy your weekend!
"Go forth into the source" - Neal Morse
modified 27-Oct-17 17:26pm.
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All these years and revisions later, does nHibernate still offer more?
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Tim Schwallie wrote: All these years and revisions later, does nHibernate still offer more?
I wouldn't know, I don't use either.
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I guess recently I miss SessionLess or whatever it was called in nHibernate.
I know there's ways to set that up in EF, just a few extra steps.
I miss being able to choose the concurrency strategy, ie use this DateTime field, increment this integer field, use sql server TimeStamp, and so on.
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I don't do much .net development any more these days, but back when I did, I always preferred NH because I had to support legacy databases. I could map a boolean in my model to a char(1) in the database without having to muck up the model code with mapping information. At the time, EF (5? I think it was?) didn't have that capability yet. Don't know if it has it yet or not.
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I have never used nH. However, the latest version EF is just fine, and I have not needed to go elsewhere.
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Best I can say is take a look at NH or it's parent Hibernate.
It'll give you an idea where a lot of the EF functionality came from.
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Who cares? Avoid both/all.
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