For each of the following statements, select Yes if the statement is true. Otherwise, select No. Hot Area:
Answer:
10 Comments on “Hot Area:”
wersays:
yes
yes
yes
10
3
Mosays:
yes, yes, yes!
5
3
Barhoooomsays:
Yes Yes Yes
5
3
JS1985says:
A user can be member of ONLY one single group! There is only one property Usergroup.
If “lt;” in the last question is meant to be “==”, then NO.
The correct answers are:
no
yes
no
2
12
Denissays:
What about user.UserGroup = Group.Administrators | Group.Managers; ?
5
0
Denissays:
So for me it is
Yes
Yes
False (if lt; is meant ==)
0
4
Robertasays:
lt = less then
9
1
Jahsays:
There is only one property UserGroup but Group is flag enum, which means if for example UserGroup = 5 it belongs to Users and Managers. That what the flags are for. So the answer is yes.
yes
yes
yes
10
3
yes, yes, yes!
5
3
Yes Yes Yes
5
3
A user can be member of ONLY one single group! There is only one property Usergroup.
If “lt;” in the last question is meant to be “==”, then NO.
The correct answers are:
no
yes
no
2
12
What about user.UserGroup = Group.Administrators | Group.Managers; ?
5
0
So for me it is
Yes
Yes
False (if lt; is meant ==)
0
4
lt = less then
9
1
There is only one property UserGroup but Group is flag enum, which means if for example UserGroup = 5 it belongs to Users and Managers. That what the flags are for. So the answer is yes.
6
0
5 = Users (1) + Managers (4)
1
0
Flag is (|) operator, not (+). So 5 = 1|4 🙂
1
0