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Admin
Josiah's method grabs the second element instead of the frist.
I can't wait to see what Josiah does with Blazor!
Admin
In addition to concatenation and split, he forgot to string and integer parse, just for good measure.
Admin
Because NextButtonText is exactly what belongs in a model.
Admin
The use of "element" here threw me for a moment because I was thinking of HTML elements and not array elements, so I was trying to figure out why there would even be a second one. I also thought at first you meant the code was wrong (as in didn't work as intended, not just...that's a roundabout way to do this).
And now I need to go look up what a Blazor is.
Admin
"First element after a quote". The first element of the array ([0]) would be before any quote, so the second element of the array ([1]) is the first element after a quote.
Admin
Oh, you thought MVC stands for Model-View-Controller, i.e. three separate items with the controller knowing both the model and the view, while the view and the model don't know anyone else? No, it's one item comprising all three: a ModelViewController.
Admin
fortunately html.actionlink doesn't mess up the attributes order
Admin
Why not? Josiah "themselves" seems to be a collective of people too.
Admin
I think we need a thread on its own to discuss Blazor.
Admin
The "person of unknown sex" use of "they" and "them" makes my teeth itch anyway, and it's doubly inappropriate here because "Josiah" is a male name.
Footnote: as I've said before, the correct pronoun for "person of unknown sex" is "he" because there are two pronouns spelled "he", although one of them is falling into disuse because ill-educated people with a political agenda conflate the two into one. In Middle English, both "he" and "they" were spelled "he" - which was which was distinguishable by e.g. verb conjugations(1) - which may be at the roots of the confusion about "historically correct" arguments today.
(1) That would be true even today, although not in the "simple completed-action past". "He walks to work" = one person, while "He walk to work" = more than one ("they"). In the "simple completed-action past", "He walked" and "He walked" are impossible to distinguish.
Admin
Well, of course! That's what makes it Enterprisey, after all.
Admin
While we are talking about ill-educated people destroying languages language perversions, let's talk about quadcopters. They cut one of the roots in half! And then replaced half of a Greek root with a Latin root! You shouldn't be complaining about something as harmless as pronoun usage when people are committing such linguistic attrocities as "quadcopter".