Environment versions
Network:
Windows 2008 Server
>>>It is the case. The Remove() method is not tied to one instance, but exists on every instance,
>>>and can be used on any of them. Until then it is "the function to remove a member object from
>>>a collection."
>>
>>But it is tied to one instance - *the* instance that invokes it.
>
>
>At the time of writing / reading the documentation that's not known. In code you provide both variables, the collection instance, and the object instance to remove, at runtime. But prior to that, and from a documentation point of view, it is the function which exists to operate upon any collection to remove any object within that collection, hence "a collection" and "an object".
I think we are going to have to agree to differ on this - anyway, there are more important things to worry about :-}
Previous
Reply
View the map of this thread
View the map of this thread starting from this message only
View all messages of this thread
View all messages of this thread starting from this message only