Comments on: .NET Internals Cookbook Part 7 — Word tearing, locking and others https://blog.adamfurmanek.pl/2019/03/30/net-internals-cookbook-part-7/ IT, operating systems, maths, and more. Mon, 01 Apr 2019 06:33:12 +0000 hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 By: dotnetomaniak.pl https://blog.adamfurmanek.pl/2019/03/30/net-internals-cookbook-part-7/#comment-654 Mon, 01 Apr 2019 06:33:12 +0000 https://blog.adamfurmanek.pl/?p=2814#comment-654 .NET Internals Cookbook Part 7 — Word tearing, locking and others – Random IT Utensils

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By: .NET Internals Cookbook Part 7 — Word tearing, locking and others - How to Code .NET https://blog.adamfurmanek.pl/2019/03/30/net-internals-cookbook-part-7/#comment-653 Sat, 30 Mar 2019 17:00:29 +0000 https://blog.adamfurmanek.pl/?p=2814#comment-653 […] on March 29, 2019by admin submitted by /u/paulviks83 [link] [comments] No comments […]

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By: .NET Internals Cookbook Part 0 — Table of contents – Random IT Utensils https://blog.adamfurmanek.pl/2019/03/30/net-internals-cookbook-part-7/#comment-652 Sat, 30 Mar 2019 09:35:56 +0000 https://blog.adamfurmanek.pl/?p=2814#comment-652 […] Part 7 — Word tearing, locking and others 45. Should we always avoid boxing? 46. What happens if first delegate method throws an exception? 47. Does foreach require interface? What is a WellKnownMember? 48. How does LINQ query syntax work? How is it compiled? 49. What is the difference between Select in IEnumerable and IQueryable? 50. How to block access to private members via reflection? 51. Can you lock a value type? […]

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