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Why would you want the server to sleep in the middle of building an HTML page for the client??
RageInTheMachine9532
"...a pungent, ghastly, stinky piece of cheese!" -- The Roaming Gnome
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Do you want to wait for some external process - or for an internal process to complete. If the latter you will need to look at threading and suspending a thread until an event or trigger occurs.
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I have written a user control for my application. This control is based on the listbox.
In the control, I have the listbox, and added a button and some labels to it
I want this control to act exactly like a normal listbox. I need the ChangedSelectedIndex event on it so that when i click on it in the main program it will do something. Oh, and also i want the button to work too, -- to have a MouseClick event.
How do i do that? I am very newbie to events and delegates, I am still very confused after reading a few articles. Can someone explain it to us
-- modified at 16:32 Thursday 1st December, 2005
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2hdass wrote: I want this control to act exactly like a normal listbox. I need the ChangedSelectedIndex event on it so that when i click on it in the main program it will do something. Oh, and also i want the button to work too, -- to have a MouseClick event.
You have to bubble the events up. In the user control, wire up the SelectedIndexChanged event of your ListBox and the Click event of the Button to local event handlers like this:
namespace Test {
public class UserControl1 : System.Windows.Forms.UserControl {
public event EventHandler SelectedIndexChanged;
public event EventHandler ButtonClick;
private System.Windows.Forms.ListBox listBox1;
private System.Windows.Forms.Button button1;
public UserControl1() {
InitializeComponent();
this.listBox1.SelectedIndexChanged +=
new System.EventHandler(this.listBox1_SelectedIndexChanged);
this.button1.Click += new System.EventHandler(this.button1_Click);
}
private void listBox1_SelectedIndexChanged(object sender, System.EventArgs e) {
if (this.SelectedIndexChanged != null)
this.SelectedIndexChanged(this, e);
}
private void button1_Click(object sender, System.EventArgs e) {
if (this.ButtonClick != null)
this.ButtonClick(this, e);
}
}
}
Now the consumers of your control can wire up the new user control events you've exposed, SelectedIndexChanged and ButtonClick , and receive notification of events to the controls that make up your user control.
Share and enjoy.
Sean
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Hi:
The SortedList class has a couple of interesting methods GetKeyList() and GetValueList(). However the return tyope is IList and I found I couldn't do much with it.
When I know that the values are doubles, I would like to be able to get a double[] array. Is there a quick way (without using for/foreach) to extract the values from the sortedlist into a double[]?
Thanks, Sam
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Yep, there's a way to do it:
double[] myArray;
SortedList myList;
[...].
myList.Values.CopyTo(myArray, 0);
The second parameter of the CopyTo method indicates the position inside myArray when the elements will start being copied.
Of course, its up to you to create an array big enough to store elements from the collection, and to check that casting from the collection elements to the array elements is consistent.
Hope this helped.
Nothing worth having comes easy.
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Sweet! that works really conveniently.
Oh... and things worth having do come easy with the help of friends on Code Project.
Regards, Sam
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How do I create a Custom DashStyle? I can't find it in MSDN help....
Thanks in advance......
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Hi,
How do I detect the default email client by c# ?
And btw can I set the default email client at
the control panel of Win XP ?
Thanks
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The default value for the registry key "HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Clients\Mail" contains the name of the sub-key that contains the information for the default mail client. For example, in my registry, I've got the following:
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Clients\Mail]
@="Mozilla Thunderbird"
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Clients\Mail\Mozilla Thunderbird]
... and more ... As you can see, my default mail client is "Mozilla Thunderbird" and the key HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Clients\Mail\Mozilla Thunderbird contains the settings.
This article may help: ARTICLE.
"we must lose precision to make significant statements about complex systems."
-deKorvin on uncertainty
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Hi
I have LDAP provider that retrieves the users from Active Directory. However, how can I get the groups for each of the user that I retrieve? It's probably not the place to ask the question, but I do it on SQL Server by running ActiveX script. Any ideas?
Thank you.
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Hi all.I want to update my UI via a background thread.
I have concluded in two options :
1.) Checking InvokeRequired
private delegate void UpdateUIHandler();
...
protected virtual void UpdateUI1()
{
if(!InvokeRequired)
{
...
}
else
{
this.Invoke(new UpdateUIHandler(UpdateUI1));
}
}
2.) Using an anonymous method and MethodInvoker:
...
public void SomeMethodRunningInDiffirentThread()
{
...
this.Invoke(new MethodInvoker(
delegate()
{
UpdateUI2();
}
));
...
}
public void UpdateUI2(){...}
So the question is the following.Which approach is more suitable?Are there any deficiencies or side-effects in any of these two methods (e.g performance,stupidity etc.) or any conceptual error in the approaches.
Thanx in advance.
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Well, the second way is more verbose, as you need two methods to do the job. You also left out the check for InvokeRequired in the second method. It's not a mistake, as Invoke internally checks if it's on the UI thread before doing the actual job.
I'd say both are equivalent, but you'd want to prefer the first.
Regards
Senthil
_____________________________
My Blog | My Articles | WinMacro
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Thanx for answering.In the second method i have intentionally left out InvokeRequired check.
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You can also shorten up the second one a bit. It avoids the overhead of an extra object creation and delegate call.
2.) Using an anonymous method and MethodInvoker:
...
public void SomeMethodRunningInDiffirentThread()
{
...
this.Invoke((MethodInvoker)delegate()
{
UpdateUI2();
}
));
...
}
Jared Parsons
jaredp@beanseed.org
http://spaces.msn.com/members/jaredp/
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Hi;
I'm french which does not know a lot about Add-ins...
I did a COM Add-ins for outlook in C# through VS .NET.
I add a configuration file in my project to set some specifics configurations.
I add a project for setup (which build a .msi file). This one copy the configuration file in the installation directory of the add-ins.
I tried to get information with the method :
String dataReadFromConfigFile = ConfigurationSettings.AppSettings["MyKeyToData"];
But it does not read my configuration file. In fact I think that it reads Outlook one.
So my question is :
How to read the configuration file in the installation directory of my add-ins ?
This question can simplified in :
How to get directory of the installation of my add-ins ? And then it can be read easyly by reading a .xml file.
Many thanks for Help
Frédéric
Frédéric
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How to copy file from a server to the other when other server is in different domain!!!!
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Use the full domain name in the UNC path.
When I'm at work I can copy a file from a path like this:
\\SomeServer\SomeShared\FileName.txt
When I connect from another domain I can use
\\SomeServer.MyCompanyName.co.uk\SomeShare\FileName.txt
Also, we have situations where there is some configuration in the Active Directory (some trust setting, I'm not the Sys Admin so I don't really know) where by different domains are given trust so that I can log on with my regular username/passphrase combination.
My: Blog | Photos
"Man who stand on hill with mouth open will wait long time for roast duck to drop in." -- Confucious
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Is it more efficient to use the Win32 API with BitBlt for double buffering or simply the .NET way with SetStyle?
I've seen many web sites that offer different opinions on this. When I'm looking at the drawing performance, it seems that BitBlt is slightly faster (Even though I doubt it's using any hardware acceleration).
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If graphics performance is the issue then you need to develop a couple test programs in C# to determine if the performanace obtained is suitable. You can always eek out greater performance by dropping down the VC++ but you might want to reserve that as your last option
Mike
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how to get a window handle in .net application.
thanks
Ramendra K
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Of the myForm.Handle property...
RageInTheMachine9532
"...a pungent, ghastly, stinky piece of cheese!" -- The Roaming Gnome
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Hi,
I am creating an application using Visual Studio .NET 2003 whose setup requires another setup to be embedded.
Is there any way by which I can embed an .msi file in my setup and launch it during the installation of my application.
I couldn't find anything on this anywhere...Please help
Sameer Bhise
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