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Hello Friends,
I have two applications in which one of them is build on VB6.0 & using Crystal Report 9.0 and the other application is build on VB.net and using .Net 2.0 Crystal Report. When running both applications on same machine the VB6.0(CR 9.0) application some times generate an error on opening report
Error # -2147417848 : Method '~' of object '~' failed
I need to know that can we run application with different version of crystal report on same machine and wat is the solution required to do it.
Regards
Ali Raza
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You might try running a tool such as Process Viewer (http://www.codeproject.com/useritems/processviewer.asp) against each of the two EXE's. Run it on:
- Machine with VB6 app only
- Machine with .NET app only
- Machine with both
See what Crystal DLL or DLL's are shared if any by the programs and compare the version numbers - maybe one is stomping on the other. Especially look for the infamous CRPE or CRPE32 DLL (aka crappy DLL)
Nice to know Crystal still suffers these issues going on 10 or more years now
- Paul
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Hi
Is it possible to query a catalog on a remote system.I am able to query the catalog when i am running the code, but once i have deployed my code on the IIS, it gives an exception 'The catalog not present.SQLState=42000'. its working fine when i am quering a remote catalog whichis on the system in the same domain, but is not working on the catalog situated in another domain.
If any ideas please reply as soon as possible.
Thanks in Advance
Manoj Kaushik
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Hi
I have framework 2 downloaded on my PC, I need to download framework 1.1 because of some application which only work on framework 1.1, Can I install framwork 1.1 without need to corrupt any thing working on framework 2? what should I do exactly in this case?
Kind Regards
Kind Regards
OBarahmeh
Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics (PCBS)
Ramallah-Palestinian Territory
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Both frameworks work just fine being installed side by side. You will have no issues. I have had both .net 1.1 and .net 2.0 on several of my machines for sometime now. I have not had any issues.
Ben
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Hi,
I am having a wcf service with base address "http://localhost:8080/dalEnquiry" ,and i am hosting the service in IIS 6.0 ,when i run the program it is showing the following error,
HTTP could not register URL http://+:8080/dalEnquiry/. Your process does not have access rights to this namespace (see http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=70353 for details).
And i tried to register this url with the use of httpcfg.exe utility ,after that also it is showing the same error,do i want to create any SSL certificate for hosting,if yes specify how to create and register it.
Gladston Raj
Software Engineer
Quest Informatics
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I am pretty sure you can not pick a port like 8080 except when you are running locally on your PC. That port would not be open on your web server. You should pick a normal url that doesn't include localhost:8080 in it. Then you need to register the DNS entry in your domain controller so your local intranet knows what IP (server) address to route intranet traffic to to resolve the url you have picked.
Hope that helps.
Ben
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Can any one help me in with documentation of RFC modules?
I need help regarding BDC function module(Recording and running a SAP transaction).
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can anybody guess
how to create a strong name of third party dll?
i am creating one class library in that I am referring the third party dll but getting error of strong name.
Thanks & Regards
Mahesh
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AFAIK, you can't. The code must be signed at compile time. Since you don't have the source, you can't strong name the assembly.
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Thanks
Actualy I spent much time on creating the strong name.
Thanks & Regards
Mahesh
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Access to the source might be required right and appropriate settings in AssemblyInfo.cs?
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hi
does my application developed on .net 2.0 will work
on .net 1.1 framework, is downward compatibility
maintained by .net
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The .NET framework applications can be run on computers that have newer .NET frameworks than what the application was compiled on, but .NET applications are not downgradable. .NET 2.0 applications will not work with .NET 1.1 systems. Visual Studio 2003 can target .NET 1.0 and .NET 1.1 applications, and I believe Visual Studio 'Orcas' will be able to target .NET frameworks 3.5, 3.0,2.0,1.1,1.0 but I could be mistaken.
Regards,
Thomas Stockwell
Programming today is a race between software engineers striving to build bigger and better idiot-proof programs, and the Universe trying to produce bigger and better idiots. So far, the Universe is winning.
Visit my homepage Oracle Studios[ ^]
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It all depends on what you're doing and what methods/namespaces you are using. Sometimes an app written in .NET 2.0 will run on 1.1, and sometimes it won't. When you're using the VS Help file or MSDN, it will say what's compatible with what version of .NET.
Trinity: Neo... nobody has ever done this before.
Neo: That's why it's going to work.
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Backward compatibility would be if 2.0 could run a 1.1 application, which it can. How on earth could the 1.1 Framework predict what it's going to need to run the more advanced features of the 2.0 Framework?? I can't!
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Hello,
I have an application built with Framework1.1.
1. Will my application work in a machine where only 2.0 is present?
2. what are the steps i must do in order to make my 1.1 application work
with 2.0?
Thanks!
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That all depends on how the applicaiton was written. If you haven't used anything that has been depricated from 1.1 to 2.0, which is very likely, it should be fine.
only two letters away from being an asset
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Will my application work in a machine where only 2.0 is present?
No
what are the steps i must do in order to make my 1.1 application work
with 2.0?
Use 2.0 to compile the code
My recommendation:
Install the 1.1 framework along side the 2.0 framework. They won't interfere with each other. All 1.1 apps need the 1.1 framework. 2.0 apps will run on the 2.0 framework.
-- modified at 11:33 Thursday 24th May, 2007
topcoderjax - Remember, Google is your friend.
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What if the application uses MFC6 or MFC (compiled and built at VS 2003)? Will I get any errors?
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I assume this is c++, which is something I don't work with. That being the case however, I think the question you've been trying unsucessfully to ask would go something like:
"If I compile a c++ application in VS 2003(1.1 framework) and the application uses MFC6 and MFC but doesn't reference the framework, do I need the 1.1 framework installed on the PC that I deploy the application on?"
Edit the question if necessary and repost it. You might be more likely to get an answer if you post it to the C++/CLI or Visual C++ forum, but I'm not certain what the difference between the two is as I code in C#.
Or you could just try it and find out. Then if you got an error you could deploy the framework.
topcoderjax - Remember, Google is your friend.
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.NET is completely irrelevant to MFC. If you write an MFC app, the MFC library you linked to will need to be present. If you compile a MFC6 app in VS2003, you will need MFC 7.1, because that's how it was built. And again, .NET is irrelevant, unless you wrote managed code also.
Christian Graus - Microsoft MVP - C++
Metal Musings - Rex and my new metal blog
"I am working on a project that will convert a FORTRAN code to corresponding C++ code.I am not aware of FORTRAN syntax" ( spotted in the C++/CLI forum )
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In the control panel applet for Regional and Language Options, under Regional Options, in the Cusomize... dialog, Numbers tab, there is an option for Display Leading Zeros.
In Win32 this is equivalent to the Information Type of LOCALE_ILZERO for the GetLocaleInfo/SetLocalInfo functions.
In dotnet the equivalent class is the System.Globalization.CultureInfo class with its NumberFormat property of type NumberFormatInfo as the class representing numeric cultural information.
Yet I can find no equivalent property in NumberFormatInfo for getting or setting the Display Leading Zeros bool value for decimal numbers
for a given culture.
Was this erroneously left out of the dotnet CultureInfo class structure, or is it someplace else where I have not found it ? If it is someplace else I would appreciate someone pointing it out to me where it is.
Obviously I can call the WIN32 API GetLocaleInfo/SetLocalInfo to get this value for a particular culture, but I would prefer not to and use the dotnet framework if it exists there.
Edward Diener
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