conformance

XPATH Conformance

I have an XPath engine implementation that needs to be tested. Is there a set of standard conformance tests that we can apply to validate that conforms to the XPath specification (in relation to XSLT). What would be perfect would be XML documents XPath expression and expected results. ...

In Objective-C, am I allowed to override a method in a subclass that the parent used to conform to a protocol?

Example is provided below. If I set id<RandomProtocol> delegate = [[B alloc] init]; Will doingSomething of class A or class B be called? A.h @protocol RandomProtocol -(NSString*)doingSomething; @end @interface A : NSObject <RandomProtocol> @end A.m #import "A.h" @implementation A - (NSString*) doingSomething { return @"...

Why is there no * in front of delegate declaration ?

Hey guys, I just noticed there is no * in front of the declaration for a delegate ... I did something like this : @protocol NavBarHiddenDelegate; @interface AsyncImageView : UIView { NSURLConnection* connection; NSMutableData* data; UIActivityIndicatorView *indicator; id <NavBarHiddenDelegate> delegate; } @prope...

Is a c# WebService with nullabele int BasicProfile 1.1 conform

Hi! I want to implement a WebService that should be BasicProfile 1.1 conform. The WebMethod should be something like this: byte[] Test(int? count) Is this call BasicProfile 1.1 conform? How can I check BasicProfile 1.1 conformability? ...

Conforming results to a scale

I'm monitoring the change in certain values day over day. The changes vary, and can be of any value size, typically 1-100 difference, but maybe there is an outlier at 500 or even 900. I want to be able to put these values on a set scale so I can plot them. Is there a formula I can use to limit the high end of the scale, so no matter...

How to check C source code against the current standard?

I'm continuing to learn C and would like to adhere to whatever is the current standard, but finding a good reference to that seems to be problem. From what I've found online (mostly through Google and Wikipedia) is that the current standard used today is C99, more formally the ISO/IEC 9899:1999 standard. When I'm writing C code, I ofte...