@mmisztal1980@jcouv I presume the use case is to create a public base class and mark it as closed. You then create additional derived classes in the same assembly. With the closed modifier the compiler knows all classes in the hierarchy. Internal โ public and sealed does not allow inheritance.
@RezaTajari70@jcouv There's no such thing as a protected class. The protected keyword applies to members making them only available to the class itself and derived classes.
@ayuninotayutu I have no skill describing food, especially food I ate 15 years ago. However, I found someone extolling the virtues of the Marseille smashed sandwiches on the internet, and they included a photo. Suffice to say, it tastes much better than it looks. ๐
@ayuninotayutu In Marseille, France they have a speciality, a ham sandwich with french fries. More than 15 years ago I got one, and it's the best sandwich I've ever had. My daughter still regrets that she didn't get one when we visited. ๐
@sant88733@JetBrainsRider Thank you. I just dismissed the suggestion to download the Breton dictionary. When I'm commenting out code it's always temporary so I'm not too bothered by inspections. ๐
@JetBrainsRider has a spell checker that supports multiple languages. I use Danish and English in my code, and I just commented out some C# code turning it into plain text. Immediately, Rider asked if I wanted to download the dictionary for Breton. Is Breton similar to C#? ๐ณ๐
@ayuninotayutu I'm currently on the third book in Joe Abercrombie's trilogy The First Law. I really like how the protagonists are depicted in an almost stereotypical way but then you learn the stereotypes don't fit at all. The first book is The Blade Itself. https://t.co/yKm0rSCZlP
@sid_web_works@housecor It's a Windows thing that dates back to long before TypeScript and Monaco. COM interfaces (the "bedrock" of Windows) are named with an 'I' prefix.
@housecor The interface naming convention was used in Windows (COM interfaces) before C# existed, and I hated it. The Microsoft C++ compiler came with printed Windows reference manuals sorted by API name. All interfaces were in the 'I' section. ๐ณ
@ayuninotayutu As a kid, I read everything including a lot of fiction. Then, as an adult, I stopped reading fiction and only consumed non-fiction, but at some point the pendulum swung back, and now I'm only reading fiction. I find it hard to concentrate when reading non-fiction. ๐ซ
@txgermanbre Yes, if we slow down and speak clearly. Especially Danish can be hard to understand because of a "muddled" pronunciation. In terms of vocabulary Swedish has more distinct words. Norway is a big and geographically separated country resulting in many local dialects.
@MikeLevin It was not a secret. The soldiers were deployed as part of an exercise but obviously it was also to have boots on the ground. The news that broke last week is that they brought explosives and blood which is not something you normally bring on an exercise. https://t.co/qa9KOLicLj
@ChrisO_wiki Brilliant reporting! Also, when this broke in Danish news this morning there were no comments from the government, the defence etc. However, I have no doubt that the journalists used sources of high quality for this story.
@aakashgupta This is similar to the Tompkins Foundation created by Douglas Tompkins, the founder of The North Face and his wife Kris Tompkins, long time CEO of Patagonia. The foundation bought up land in Chile that has now been converted to national parks. https://t.co/T630pymbP2