If you intend to return anything but JSON, you must set the Content-Type header, becausethe resolver will by default try to serialize your content as JSON, and obviously fail unless it isvalid JSON.You can also return stream objects using for instance the [return-value] slot, at which pointASP.NET Core will automatically stream your content back over the response object, and Disposeyour stream automatically for you afterwards. This allows you to for instance return large files backto the client without loading them into memory first. If you do this, you'll have to changeyour Content-Type accordingly.
Magics 9.5 Serial Key keygen
There has been a clear trend towards greater continuity in television. Early shows were either genre anthologies (like The Twilight Zone) or status quo is god (like Star Trek: The Original Series); the most you could hope for was the occasional two-part episode or callback to an earlier episode. Contrast to the present day, when it seems that everything is a serial.
I actually think that anthology series are due for a comeback. Not episode by episode, but each season doing its own thing in a similar style or genre, like true detective. It lets you craft very serialized, integrated story arcs without the difficulties and risks of planning them out years in advance. Plus the ones that really work you can spin off into their own series.
I agree. And also I think it helps with a problem for series I expressed in a previous OT: The overwhelming bias towards unlikable characters. In a serial, it seems like villains must become the central character, or a central character must become a villain. In the traditional format your main characters can remain likeable and interesting.
As dramatic as it may be to finally eliminate the villain or for the hero to make the ultimate sacrifice, if the story is going on, the likelihood that it will stick is inverse to how compelling the character is. The longer the serial, the less final death is likely to be and the less dramatic impact it will tend to have. (Superhero comics being the ultimate expression of this.)
After enough rounds of this, I think it natural for studios to look for ways to make the product better, and one solution was to optimize the writing for boxed sets. So they took this idea of fixed length stories and ran with it, knowing from experience with dramatic serials, westerns, etc. that a good writer can plan a cliffhanger every episode, a bigger cliffhanger every season, and a huge climax ending season 5 or 7 or whatever, and then they just do it again. 2ff7e9595c
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