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- What does the = gt; operator mean in a property or method?
In my situation I had my property auto initialize a command in a ViewModel for a View I changed the property to use expression bodied initializer and the command CanExecute stopped working Here's what it looked like and here's what was happening
- error TS2339: Property x does not exist on type Y
When accessing a property, the "dot" syntax (images main) supposes, I think, that it already exists I had such problems without Typescript, in "vanilla" Javascript, where I tried to access data as: return json property[0] index where index was a variable But it interpreted index, resulting in a: cannot find property "index" of json property[0]
- How to exclude property from Json Serialization - Stack Overflow
I have a DTO class which I Serialize Json Serialize(MyClass) How can I exclude a public property of it? (It has to be public, as I use it in my code somewhere else)
- . net - Get value of a specific object property in C# without knowing . . .
In my case I had a serialized JSON value and was attempting to De-Serialize it as an object and then use reflection to read the object property values The results were always null for some reason though, but this answer was the solution!
- How to add property to a class dynamically? - Stack Overflow
16 How to add property to a python class dynamically? Say you have an object that you want to add a property to Typically, I want to use properties when I need to begin managing access to an attribute in code that has downstream usage, so that I can maintain a consistent API
- OOP Terminology: class, attribute, property, field, data member
For instance in this article I read this ( class attribute (or class property, field, or data member) I have seen rather well cut out questions that show that there is a difference between class property and class field for instance What is the difference between a Field and a Property in C#?
- . net - Whats the difference between a dependency property and an . . .
There is a difference between registering a dependency property as a regular and as an attached property, other than a "philosophical" one (regular properties are intended to be used by the declaring type and its deriving types, attached properties are intended to be used as extensions on arbitrary DependencyObject instances)
- How can you test if an object has a specific property?
The solution that appears to iterate through every property and uses a regular expression is a little slower than the previous two solutions (because compiling and executing the regular expression takes more time)
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