C# Logic – gaps & Islands
I am looking for help designing the display of available times for appointments (for example a hairdresser’s appointment book).
C# Logic – gaps & Islands
I am looking for help designing the display of available times for appointments (for example a hairdresser’s appointment book).
C# Logic – gaps & Islands
I am looking for help designing the display of available times for appointments (for example a hairdresser’s appointment book).
C# Logic – gaps & Islands
I am looking for help designing the display of available times for appointments (for example a hairdresser’s appointment book).
C# Logic – gaps & Islands
I am looking for help designing the display of available times for appointments (for example a hairdresser’s appointment book).
Calculating WPM given a variable stream of input
I’m creating an application that sits in the background and records all key presses (currently this is done and working; an event is fired every keydown/keyup). I want to offer a feature for the user that will show them their WPM over the entire session the program has been running for. This would be easy if I added a “Start” and “End” button to activate a timer, but I need to detect only when the user is typing continuously – ignoring all one-time keyboard shortcuts and breaks the user takes from typing.
Calculating WPM given a variable stream of input
I’m creating an application that sits in the background and records all key presses (currently this is done and working; an event is fired every keydown/keyup). I want to offer a feature for the user that will show them their WPM over the entire session the program has been running for. This would be easy if I added a “Start” and “End” button to activate a timer, but I need to detect only when the user is typing continuously – ignoring all one-time keyboard shortcuts and breaks the user takes from typing.
Can’t comprehend the logic of Bead Challenge on InterviewBit
So I’ve been practicing few coding question on InterviewBit and I came across ‘Bead Challenge’. Here’s the questions:
What would be the better practice to go about a force update logic for mobile apps?
I’m working on the backend for our app and currently reworking the update logic and am a little unsure about how to deal with the particular case where:
The user hasn’t used the app for a while and skipped a couple of updates which included at least one forced version, but the latest version doesn’t require a force update.
I am looking to make sense of donkey anaphora
Can someone explain why these sentences pose an issue to logical analysis?