When developing applications in .NET Core, you might often need a single, shared instance of a class. Typical use cases would be an instance of LogManager, StateManager, etc. You can either use a ...
The static keyword in the C# programming language allows you to define static classes and static members. A static class is similar to a class that is both abstract and sealed. The difference between ...
Visual Basic and C# are like two peas in a programming pod. Both languages use the .NET Framework as the foundation for data and code processing, so naturally there's a lot of overlap in how they ...
Peter's convinced you're not using Shared and static members enough, but then he's also convinced that none of you know about all the ways you can use those two keywords. The methods, properties and ...
is it really not possible? <BR><BR>edit: the only way I get this to work is to declare an abstract method in the base class, then hide it with a new one in the derived class, and have the hider call ...