On Thu, Jun 5, 2008 at 8:02 AM, Norbert Hartl <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I don't care if it is called hair-splitting or something different. I > must agree with Bert. I found it interesting but misplaced on beginners. > What you were talking about had nothing to do with the Problem Rob was > asking (and to continue in Bert's words: If you use thisContext tempAt: > you've left the beginner area already). With your first line you > confused even me and I'm little bit reluctant now to be called a > newbie ;) > > Writing > > { 'this', 'and', 'that' } > > instead of > > Array with: 'this and that' > > let people like me assume there is some black magic happening. To under- > stand the problem dots instead of commata makes it clearer. So maybe you > can understand that while you are right you can spread uncertainty to > those which aren't that experienced (this includes me as well). And > to some who are that experienced it appears like hair-splitting ;) > Nonetheless, thanks to all your help, I understand things better now, and can properly remove objects I currently "have control over." Because I was able to test things based on all your feedback, I have narrowed my problem down to an Aida misunderstanding on my part. For any Aida-ers out there, playing with a WebGrid, it's bound objects, and garbage collection should lead one to a greater understanding of WebSession(s) and WebSessionManager(s)! I'm not saying I've figured it out yet--just that I can get reproducible results now! Thanks for the help, Rob
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