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Story and video.
DDR is a dancing game. The classroom edition allows a bunch of pads to connect to the same system, and students can carry around cards that give them individual stats, such as calories burned.
Would it be creepy if I showed up at a school asking to dance with them?
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AspDotNetDev wrote: Would it be creepy if I showed up at a school asking to dance with them?
Yes.[^]
All of the books in the world contain no more information than is broadcast as video in a single large American city in a single year. Not all bits have equal value.
Carl Sagan
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The Deutsche Democratiche Republic (sp) is now a dancing game?
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Can't tell if you are joking or are serious.
So, which one?
public class SysAdmin : Employee
{
public override void DoWork(IWorkItem workItem)
{
if (workItem.User.Type == UserType.NoLearn){
throw new NoIWillNotFixYourComputerException(new Luser(workItem.User));
}else{
base.DoWork(workItem);
}
}
}
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Now please port C# to Android.
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I'm surprised that no-one has ported either to JavaScript yet.
--------------
TTFN - Kent
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Also, here is the story that was recently posted in this forum about that very topic.
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Dear FSM, it is the language that will eat the world, isn't it?
--------------
TTFN - Kent
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Actually, that one looks like C#->JS port tool. I'm just afraid of someone writing a full .NET compiler in JS, or a Linux clone. Only a matter of time.
--------------
TTFN - Kent
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This month, contribute a news item in the Insider News forum and you'll have a chance to win a $25 Amazon gift card. The heart of The Code Project is member contributions. Now you can contribute news, too.
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The purpose of a GUID is, as the name implies, to uniquely identify something, so that we can refer to that thing by its identifier and have confidence that everyone can agree upon what thing we are referring to. Here's why it's useful... and problematic. A universally unique guide to GUIDs.
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Spine and Backbone are two Javascript MVC frameworks that look very similar on the surface but under the hood there are key differences. The purpose of this article is to highlight these differences and hopefully make it easier to choose which framework fits your needs. Invertebrate frameworks need not apply.
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Terrence Dorsey wrote: Invertebrate frameworks need not apply.
I like how you made a pun out of that!
All of the books in the world contain no more information than is broadcast as video in a single large American city in a single year. Not all bits have equal value.
Carl Sagan
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We report on the birth and evolution of Lua and discuss how it moved from a simple configuration language to a versatile, widely used language that supports extensible semantics, anonymous functions, full lexical scoping, proper tail calls, and coroutines. From Brazil, with love.
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You've installed them. You've loved them. You've hated them. But have you ever lined them up to compare one version of the .NET Framework against the others? Here's one man's attempt at a framework to chart the history of .NET versions. What's in each version of .NET? Check this table for all the details.
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He left out Extension Methods -- I guess it's bundled into:
"
1. Added new features such as AJAX-enabled Web sites and LINQ
"
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I have been moving away from the object-oriented development principles that have made up the bulk of my 17 year career to date. More and more I am beginning to feel that objects have been a diversion away from building concise, well structured and reusable software. I realised that this isn’t a sudden switch in my thinking. The benefits of objects have been gradually declining over a long period of time. The way I use objects today is very different to how I used them when they were new and shiny. The agony and the ecstasy of OOP.
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"Mutable state causes pain."
I mostly disagree; mutable state is a strength of OOP, but if you feel it causes pain that would certainly appear to be a sign that OOP is the wrong tool for what you are doing.
OOP is not the right tool for all jobs and one of the few things I don't like about C# is the "everything is an object" aspect.
Having said that, without mutable state, to start your car you would have to replace the engine with a running one.
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Microsoft's $300 million investment in B&N's digital business is about more than ebooks. Much more. Or at least I hope so. Success in this venture will not be measured by sales of ebooks. Microsoft should instead use this as an opportunity to create an end-to-end consumer experience that rivals Apple's and has the advertising income potential to make Google jealous. If we're all on the same page, the synergies will surely follow.
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The process of creating and sending out a newsletter is a lot easier than one may think, but to design a custom template and build your own code — this can take a bit longer. We have compiled some fantastic tips to get you designing high-quality HTML newsletters like never before. Have you got anything without spam?
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When designing a secure service that stores user data, you might be temped to say “let’s make sure the data is encrypted.” That statement implies that you’re proposing adding goodness, without taking anything away. Something like “I’d like some of that delicious gravy on my roast turkey, please.” Unfortunately, encryption is not gravy. There are deep consequences to the product you’re building once you choose to encrypt data, and the consequences differ greatly depending on the key management mechanism you choose. Users won’t accept inconvenience.
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How do geniuses come up with ideas? What is common to the thinking style that produced "Mona Lisa," as well as the one that spawned the theory of relativity? What characterizes the thinking strategies of the Einsteins, Edisons, daVincis, Darwins, Picassos, Michelangelos, Galileos, Freuds, and Mozarts of history? What can we learn from them? If someone asks me another dumb question...
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