Try doing this with regular expressions. https://gifs.com/player/G6m3vQ
I think that's true, but the same statistics of people on diet can be found, and I think (without any statistics of my own) that culture and group mentality plays a role there as well.
Well for the last 4 months, MSBuild alpha has been out with the option to use "dotnet migrate" to migrate a project.json to a project.csproj file. The other 6 months I agree has left people in a limbo. Only people…
You make it sound like this change was a snap decision. It's been known for at least 10 months now that project.json was going away. All the documentation I stumbled upon on github also made this clear. While I would…
Why? As long as they come along with facts and data, then that's a good thing.
I'm working on a browser game, that does all communication to the game server through WebSockets. Here I have the clients ping the server every 2 seconds, and if I haven't received a message with in 10 seconds…
Indeed - I think this is a welcome change. Might make it confusing for a year - but makes way more sense for the next 14 years.
Just download NoScript - it's better than turning JavaScript off and on all the time anyway.
Try doing this with regular expressions. https://gifs.com/player/G6m3vQ
I think that's true, but the same statistics of people on diet can be found, and I think (without any statistics of my own) that culture and group mentality plays a role there as well.
Well for the last 4 months, MSBuild alpha has been out with the option to use "dotnet migrate" to migrate a project.json to a project.csproj file. The other 6 months I agree has left people in a limbo. Only people…
You make it sound like this change was a snap decision. It's been known for at least 10 months now that project.json was going away. All the documentation I stumbled upon on github also made this clear. While I would…
Why? As long as they come along with facts and data, then that's a good thing.
I'm working on a browser game, that does all communication to the game server through WebSockets. Here I have the clients ping the server every 2 seconds, and if I haven't received a message with in 10 seconds…
Indeed - I think this is a welcome change. Might make it confusing for a year - but makes way more sense for the next 14 years.
Just download NoScript - it's better than turning JavaScript off and on all the time anyway.