Skip to main content

Home/ Programming/ Group items matching "Add-In" in title, tags, annotations or url

Group items matching
in title, tags, annotations or url

Sort By: Relevance | Date Filter: All | Bookmarks | Topics Simple Middle
Andrey Karpov

Visual Studio tool windows - 0 views

  •  
    This article covers the extension of Visual Studio IDE through integration of a custom user toolwindow into the environment. Discussed are the issues of window registration and initialization in VSPackage and Add-In plug-in modules, hosting of user components and handling of window's events and states.
Andrey Karpov

Errors detected in Open Source projects by the PVS-Studio developers through static analysis - 0 views

  •  
    We regularly check various open-source projects with PVS-Studio and send analysis results to developers and usually describe them in our posts as well. Besides, we add them into our bug database. This database is posted below on this page. The bugs are grouped according to the number of the diagnostic rule that is used to detect them. This number is given in the left column. Click on it to see the diagnostic rule description in the documentation. The right column contains a link to the corresponding error samples. Some diagnostics haven't detected any bugs in open-source projects yet. The lower you are in the list, the more diagnostics with no error samples there will be. The reason is simple: the later a certain rule had been added, the fewer projects were analyzed with this rule included into the rule set and therefore the fewer chances for it to demonstrate its capabilities.
Richard Boss

Steps to Write PHP Code in Joomla Article | TechNet - 0 views

  •  
    This article explores you how to follow steps to write PHP code in Joomla article. In this post, you will get full information. Read this post now!
Andrey Karpov

Low-Fragmentation, High-Performance Memory Allocation in Despair Engine - 0 views

  •  
    I recently wrote about dlmalloc and how it is a poor choice for a memory allocator for console games. As I explained in my previous article, dlmalloc has two major limitations. It manages a pool of address space composed of discrete regions called segments. It can easily add segments to grow its pool of address space, but it can't easily remove segments to return address space to the OS. Additionally, it doesn't distinguish between physical and virtual memory, which means that it can't take advantage of virtual memory's ability to combat fragmentation.
yc c

Project Lombok - 0 views

  •  
    @Getter / @Setter Never write public int getFoo() {return foo;} again. @ToString No need to start a debugger to see your fields: Just let lombok generate a toString for you! @EqualsAndHashCode Equality made easy: Generates hashCode and equals implementations from the fields of your object. @Data All together now: A shortcut for @ToString, @EqualsAndHashCode, @Getter on all fields, and @Setter on all non-final fields. You even get a free constructor to initialize your final fields! @Cleanup Automatic resource management: Call your close() methods safely with no hassle. @Synchronized synchronized done right: Don't expose your locks. @SneakyThrows To boldly throw checked exceptions where no one has thrown them before! The documentation above is a lot easier to follow, but if you want to build your own transformations, or you want to add javadoc to lombok.jar in your IDE, you can also check out the javadoc.
yc c

Like, Python - 0 views

  • Like making computers do your bidding? Enjoy Python features like lambdas? Indent-grouping? List comprehensions? Tired of Old Man Python telling you what you can and can't say to your computer? It's about time programming languages understood what the kids are typing these days. So let's start with a baby step in that direction: Like, Python.
  • Like, Python uses Python's own tokenizer to essentially add keywords to Python's lexical understanding. Python is a subset of Like, Python, so any script you've already written in Python is valid Like, Python and will run in the interpreter. But you can also write like you'd speak. For example, the following is a fully-functional "hello world" script, included in the download as hello_world.lp: #!usr/bin/python # My first Like, Python script! yo just print like "hello world" bro
  •  
    Write like you speak... if you speak like that
1 - 6 of 6
Showing 20 items per page