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OutSystems Exam Associate-Reactive-Developer Topic 1 Question 20 Discussion

Actual exam question for OutSystems's Associate Reactive Developer (OutSystems 11)Exam exam
Question #: 20
Topic #: 1
[All Associate Reactive Developer (OutSystems 11)Exam Questions]

List.Current in Aggregates will return the record at any position

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Suggested Answer: D

Contribute your Thoughts:

Royal
8 days ago
You know, this question is really making my brain hurt. Maybe we should all take a break and grab some coffee before we tackle this again.
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Vesta
8 days ago
Okay, let's break this down. 'List.Current' implies we're dealing with a list, and 'in Aggregates' means it's part of some kind of aggregate operation. I'm going to go with option C, because it seems the most logical way to reference the 'current' record in an aggregate.
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Hannah
9 days ago
Ha! I bet the answer is 'All of the above'. These certification exams love to mess with you like that. But for real, I think option B makes the most sense. The 'current' position in an aggregate is usually the last record, right?
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Gearldine
10 days ago
Aha! I've got it. List.Current in Aggregates returns the record at the current position, not a specific position. So the answer has to be D, the first record.
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Norah
10 days ago
Hmm, let me think about this. I'm pretty sure List.Current refers to the current position in the list, so it should return the record at that position. I'm leaning towards option C, since list.length is a more common way to refer to the size of the list.
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Margery
10 days ago
Hold up, guys. Isn't List.Current in Aggregates supposed to return the current record being processed? I don't think any of these options are correct.
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Myong
11 days ago
Wait, what? List.Current in Aggregates? I thought we were supposed to be dealing with simple queries, not some advanced aggregate stuff. This question is throwing me off already.
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Domingo
12 days ago
Hmm, I'm not so sure. Isn't List.Count the same as List.Length? I'm leaning towards B, but I'm open to discussion.
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Timmy
13 days ago
I think the answer is C. List.length - 1 would give you the last record in the list, which makes the most sense to me.
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Curtis
15 days ago
Wait, is this a trick question? List.Current in Aggregates can't possibly return an empty record, right? That's just absurd.
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