Do you think I could just leave this part blank and it'd be okay? We're just going to replace the whole thing with a header image anyway, right?
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Wolf.cs
So far it's nothing to be impressed by. It needs a lot of work, I also have plans for it.
I'm looking for pointers or better methods I could use to do something like this.
EDIT: Apologies. I changed the link to where it doesn't link to the raw text.
This is what I use to parse text by separating it into blocks and checking what the first word is which is the initial.
Here's an example:
INPUT-> ee login <email> <password>
Input = "ee login <email> <password>"
Parsed = { "ee", "login", "<email>", "<password>" }
Count = 4
Entries = 3
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You should at least explain what it does, because opening up the source just to guess its purpose isn't convenient.
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As mentioned it indeed would be nice to know what it's supposed to do, because I have no idea what it does when reading the code.
It's also a bit odd to start variable with upper case, for C# (and java and probably a couple other languages) camelCase is more used (meaning first word lower case, then all next works first letter upper case), that way you can also easily distinguish them from methods (which do start with upper case).
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It's also a bit odd to start variable with upper case
In my AP Comp Science class, learning Java, we have to use camelcase but I never use it on C#
thanks zoey aaaaaaaaaaaand thanks latif for the avatar
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From what I see, it just splits the input by spaces, and you can get the number of items or one of the n-th word of the inputted string. Not being mean, but wrapping this in a class isn't really useful, you can just as easily directly use an array.
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camelCase is more used (meaning first word lower case, then all next works first letter upper case), that way you can also easily distinguish them from methods (which do start with upper case).
Methods start with a lowercase letter in camelCase, too. Usually only classes start with uppercase letters.
I'm more of a fan of PascalCasing, though. I think it's easier on the eyes.
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den3107 wrote:camelCase is more used (meaning first word lower case, then all next works first letter upper case), that way you can also easily distinguish them from methods (which do start with upper case).
Methods start with a lowercase letter in camelCase, too. Usually only classes start with uppercase letters.
I'm more of a fan of PascalCasing, though. I think it's easier on the eyes.
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Will this eventually have any connection to EE?
I will use it for bots, but currently it's being worked with everything in mind (well, anything that could utilize this.)
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