|
Wouter Van Ranst wrote: it seems the .DataBind() method has disappeared from the DataGrid
Is this ASP.NET?
|
|
|
|
|
just normal C#
|
|
|
|
|
So Winforms? There never has been a DataBind in Winforms that is in ASP.NET. DataBind provides the timing mechanism required in a Web application. In a process based application you are always bound after initialization.
|
|
|
|
|
thanks for clearing this up, so how do i attach the DataReader to the DataGridView, the code in the article doesn't work without the DataBind() method (nothing is displayed in the DataGridView)
|
|
|
|
|
I have not used a DataReader but the DataGridView.DataSource property is how you bind it to data.
|
|
|
|
|
Can some one help me out of understanding the delegate.
we are calling some method with delegate object.
program t1=new program()
delegateabc d1 = new delegateabc(t1.Testabc);
Here I am calling the method Testabc from class program.
I don't understand what is the benefit of calling through delagate
I can directly use t1.testabc not going through delagte.
can someone help me ou with the difference.
t
|
|
|
|
|
The code wouldn't call the function. For this you would have to add:
d1(probablySomeArguments);
In this simple scenario it doesn't make any sense. Let me try to construct a rather simple case where it could be useful:
Lets assume you have an array of numbers which you want to apply a function to each one:
public void Calculate(int[] numbers) {
for (int i = 0; i < numbers; i++)
numbers[i] = numbers[i] * 2;
}
This small snippet would double all numbers. But what if several callers want to do different things with those numbers? For this you *could* use a delegate:
public delegate int NumberCalculaterCallback(int number);
public void Calculate(int[] numbers, NumberCalculaterCallback callback) {
for (int i = 0; i < numbers; i++)
numbers[i] = callback(numbers[i]);
}
Now the caller could input any function it likes:
public class Caller {
private int Double(int number) {
return number * 2;
}
private int AddOne(int number) {
return number + 1;
}
private int Square(int number) {
return Math.Pow(number, 2);
}
public void Test() {
int[] numbers = new int[] { 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 };
Calculate(numbers, new NumberCalculaterCallback(Double));
Calculate(numbers, new NumberCalculaterCallback(AddOne));
Calculate(numbers, new NumberCalculaterCallback(Square));
}
}
Calculate now uses functions which it has absolute no clue about. This function could be anywhere, even in a different assembly. It just needs to know about the delegate definition and can then make any processing with the numbers the caller can think of.
|
|
|
|
|
Robert,
Thank you very much Now I understood filly.Thanks again for helping
in this concept
|
|
|
|
|
Hello All,
I am trying to read a row from a gridview and display the items in the row in to textboxes. I have my gridview set up and is working fine but I could't figure out how to take the selected row's items. Any help would be appriciated.
Thanks
|
|
|
|
|
<br />
GridViewRow gvr = gvYourGrid.Rows[X]<br />
tbYourTextBox = ((Label)gvr.FindControl("lblGridData")).Text;<br />
...continue for each cell or label to populate...<br />
<br />
tbYourTextBox = gvr.Cells[Y].Text;<br />
...continue for each cell or textbox you need to populate...<br />
X is the row you want the items from and Y is the cell;
|
|
|
|
|
Thank you so much for your reply. I understand what you mean and it is working perfect when I put in the row and column numbers but my problem is I don't know which row the user would select. The data is read form a database and I put a radio button beside all rows. I want the user select the row from the radio button and click on a button after that the information on that row would be shown in appropiate textboxes.
I am really stuck on that and I would really appriciate your help.
Thanks
|
|
|
|
|
Try this, you go through each row in the GridView looking for the one with the selected radio button and break out when you find it.
<br />
foreach (GridViewRow gvr in gvYourGridView.Rows)<br />
{<br />
if (((RadioButton)gvr.FindControl("rbYourRadioButton")).Checked)<br />
{<br />
<br />
break; <br />
}<br />
}<br />
-- modified at 17:55 Tuesday 27th June, 2006
EDIT: .Checked not .Selected
|
|
|
|
|
Great! Thank you so much, I really appriciate it.
Cheers
|
|
|
|
|
Let say I have 2 methods:
void BeginGroup();
void BeginGroup(string msg);
when I want to refer to them I write
/// <see cref="BeginGroup"/>
But this cause a compiler warning, where my declaration is ambiguous (between the 2 BeginGroup methods).
But what if I want to refer them both?
In much the same way as when you click on "Console.WriteLine" and you go to the page which lists all the possible polymorphic variations?
|
|
|
|
|
My main form can open multiple non-modal child windows (FormBorderStyle.FixedToolWindow, Owner set to the main form).
The main form has a MainMenuStrip with items that have shortcuts (e.g. Ctrl+F for "find", Ctrl+R for "replace"). But inside the "find" dialog, pressing Ctrl+R has no effect (well, it plays a beeping sound...).
How can I send the key presses to the MainMenuStrip? I want to forward only those key presses that are not handled by the child window.
|
|
|
|
|
Hello
I think this would be a simple task -Even though I don't think I like the idea-
Simply -I suppose- you have your KeyUp event handlers in your child forms. When they catch a key that should be passed to the parent they should call a public method to your main From.
eg.
ChildFormKeyDownHandler(EventArgs e)
{
//Handle my keys
//...
//...
if(e.Key == somekey)
{
myParent.PublicMethod();
}
}
While sending the keys themselves to the parent form won't gain you anything.
Yet if you still insist on this try looking for "SendKeys" class in your MSDN
|
|
|
|
|
I cannot use SendKeys because I don't want to change focus to the main window.
And thanks, I know how to call public methods on other forms, but I did not find a way to call shortcuts in a MainMenuStrip.
I don't want to write the code searching the correct item for the shortcut myself because the main menu can be extended by AddIns in different ways.
|
|
|
|
|
Hello again
I didn't mean to offend you in any way, yet just like I said, what is the point of calling a shortcut of a form that's not active!! Anyway I'm just trying to help here.
Three hints:
1- You can activate the parent form, do the SendKeys, then reactivate the last active child form
2- You can import an old API function named "SendMessage" or "PostMessage", tyhen use your parent's Handle to send a WM_KeyDown message.
3- You can make the parent's event handlers call public methods, and call them from the child froms
Or you can just check this link, it might help
http://www.codeproject.com/cpp/sendkeys_cpp_Article.asp[^]
Sorry it's C++;)
That was all I could come up with. I hope it would be of some use.
|
|
|
|
|
How can I do that?
I'm experimenting exceptions when trying to save an xml document with the XmlDocument object in a web service.
Thanx for any help.
|
|
|
|
|
What exceptions?
---
b { font-weight: normal; }
|
|
|
|
|
Excepción no controlada del tipo 'System.Web.Services.Protocols.SoapException' en system.web.services.dll
Additional info: System.Web.Services.Protocols.SoapException: Server cannot process request. ---> System.UnauthorizedAccessException: Access denied to path "D:\Uni\Proyecto\DatosSI0506\Configuracion\Config.xml".
I've translated some of the text.
I've tried a bunch of things and none work. I even tried to delete the file first, so it can save it correctly without overwriting, but it's useless. It doesn't let me delete.
|
|
|
|
|
Is the file located in the web folder? If not, then you might need to grant access to it for the user account running the web service. Usually it's the IIS_WPG or ASPNET account.
---
b { font-weight: normal; }
|
|
|
|
|
It's not in the web folder. How can I grant access with XP Pro SP2?
If not, moving the file to the web folder does the trick? What path should I use then? Maybe C:\Inetpub\wwwroot\...?
|
|
|
|
|
sergestusxx wrote: How can I grant access
Open the properties for the file or the folder and go to the security tab. Add the user account to the list if it's not there. Set write permission for the user account.
sergestusxx wrote: If not, moving the file to the web folder does the trick? What path should I use then?
Any folder above the web root would probably do. Start by putting it in the same folder as the web service, that has the best chances to work.
---
b { font-weight: normal; }
|
|
|
|
|
In my Windows XP Pro SP2 I don't have any security tab like in W2000 O_o
|
|
|
|