Since you are using web forms, you might as well use the server controls they made to make your life easier.
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/vstudio/fkzs2t3h(v=vs.100).aspx *
As for any ORM, the benefits, most of the time, trump the performance implications. A lot of what an ORM does...
So if there is a remote, it uses a wireless signal, correct? If that is the case, how long before someone cracks it and makes a program that can trigger it from their cell?!?!
Depends, like all other consisitency is most important, that said I normally use option 1. I do use option 3 for auto-properties
public bool IsActive { get; private set; }
Remove the square brakets in your name tags. I have never seen anyone do that. I would recommend using a hypen if you want to break it up. EG 1-acctnum
I haven't played any since X-2....obviously for good reason lol. But I would have to say 9, 7, 8, 6 are my favorite.
FF7 was good, the beginning is a little slow, which it was a little faster to get into the over-world, but other than that it had many good things about it: materia, mini...
I was ROFL'ing all over the place. I actually owned this game for the Sega-CD and I appreciate you sir and your post.
To appreciate this post, please watch this. skip to 5:30
Holy crap, I thought I was the only person that ever played that game. It was a good one and went on forever it seemed. Had everything, puzzles, FPS-missions, hand-to-hand, you could transfer your soul to another body, I mean hoy crap was that game good!
Are you using the exact same web server (engine, version, etc...)?
I have heard that sometimes then it attempts to resolve a path, instead of using the css relative path, it uses the websites relative path. Haven't seen it myself, but heard of it.
using "../" will back you up a directory and "../../" will back you up 2 directories.
I am finding it hard to figure out the usefulness of this. A single directory up from the current location is the "root" directory and a directory up from that location is the root of those files, so how...
From my understanding, your code is no different than mine. It is still a selector that selects ALL the anchor tags and wires the click event of each that to it. I guess I kinda see the point of selecting the body, but I don't know the performance implications, if any, that would occur from...
From past experiences, you would need to create a external js file that the user would have to put on all their web pages. When the document is loaded, you would start trackins various things. EX: Every second or two, you would use a ajax request to your server that the user is on the page...