Just been banging my head against a wall trying to work out why an injected dependency was coming through as null in a WebApplicationFactory test.
Turned out it was because I was doing the injection via a primary constructor, and switching to a normal constructor fix it! I assumed primary constructors were just syntax sugar - so this is surprisingly unexpected.
Anyone know why primary constructors would behave differently for DI? #dotnet#csharp
I learned you can use the break inside a loop to return a value. It feels strange coming to #Rust from #csharp. I would have expected to use the return keyword, but I guess it makes sense.
By the way, I'm taking the #JetBrains Academy course, so if you want to follow along, check it out.
Out of 6 languages recommended by the NSA, 4 are patended bvy multibillion comanies who can pull the plug on them at any time (and Oracle already tried that).
C# - PATENTED by Microsoft,
Go - PATENTED by Google
Java - PATENTED by Oracle, NOT FREE
Python - not too shabby
Rust - not too shabby
Swift - PATENTED by Apple
A game without Immersive audio, intelligent camera movements, dynamic sound, background music and captivating visual effects, from smoke and explosions to customizable particle systems, is like a tasteless dish & nobody loves that.
Check this book out (book link) to learn from 160 Unity Recipes and elevate your game development skills.
TIL VS2019 doesn't support .NET 6 and if you mix .NET SDK 8 or so with VS2019 it will horribly fail, as it expects that directory structure to be different...
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It turns out that #Rust has something similar to extension methods in #csharp. You can create additional implementations outside of type definitions to include more functionality at the call site.
I've been impacted by the recent #layoffs at Farfetch. Are you in need of an experienced #CSharp developer? I'm ready to start right away. With extensive expertise in developing libraries for #dotnet, I'm based in Lisbon, Portugal. Feel free to review my abilities on my blog. https://aalmada.github.io/
Anyone hiring software engineers? I'm a senior engineer with a passion for software quality and working on interesting problems. I'm mainly experienced with C#/.NET, Node, TypeScript, React.
I am unfortunately at the ends of my patience with my current role (hired for XYZ, three months in, moved to team working on ABC and I'm sat waiting for work).
I have finally “finished" and written up the "it'll just be a couple of weeks!” project that I started in December, exploring the idea of writing a Windows app in C# that calls into a cross-platform Swift codebase.
It's been quite the journey 😅, and if you find this sort of thing interesting I'd appreciate it if you'd check it out and give it a boost.
Working on text input widget. Happy with the state of it, still need to implement some stuff (like password input, clipboard, deciding if I want to support multi-line later, etc) but works pretty alright for now!
This article is all about how things are looking great for hiring Laravel devs in 2024, and I’m not seeing it.
I’ve been job-searching for 3 months, and very, very, very few of those jobs are decent-paying #PHP / #Laravel jobs. Sure, PHP/Laravel jobs exist, but most (anecdotally) pay far less than the rate others are willing to pay for #Golang, #Python, #Rust, #Elixir, #Java, #Csharp, and #TypeScript developers.
The industry does not value the output of PHP developers.