qualified-name

How do I write the qualified name of a symbol in Haskell?

I've got a name clash between two different Haskell modules that want to use the same infix operator (<*>). The Haskell 98 report says that modid.varsym is permitted, but I can't get it to work. In their entirety here are Test.hs: module Test where import qualified Test2 as T three = T.<*> and Test2.hs: module Test2 where (<*>...

How do you find the fully qualified path name of a file?

On Windows, you can go to "Run," type in "cmd," press enter, and start up "C:\Windows\system32\cmd.exe" rather easily. The same is true for "python" or "pythonw" (though nothing pops up in the second example). If all you know is that you want to execute "python" or "pythonw" and that it is on the PATH, what is the simplest way in C to fi...

Why qualify global elements in instance document?

When validating an xml document using xml-Schema and namespaces, the instance document has to have its global element prefixed with a namespace to qualify it, besides declaring the namespace itself. One would think that a default namespace would suffice in this case to qualify the element, but xml-Schema apparently has another opinion. ...

Qualified naming

I'm currently doing some maintenance on an application and I've come across a big issue regarding the qualified name in tsql. I wondering if someone could clear my confusion up for me. From my understanding you want to use USE [DatabaseName] to declare which database you are using. I notice if u "rename" the databse it automatically u...

XDocument.Descendants(itemName) - Problems finding qualified name

Hello, this is my first post here - usually i'll find the answer somewhere in this board - but not today :-( okay: I,m trying to read a XML-RSS-Feed from a website. Therefore i use a async download and create a XDocument with the XDocument.Parse() Method. The Document intends to be very simple, like this: <root> <someAttribute></S...