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ASP.net postback
always reload the page
so what u have to do is to set the custom error off
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hi thanks again
actualy i am a bit newer in web programming
can u please explain custom error off and its effect ?
thank in advance
best regards
hello
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Custom Errors[^]
Regards,
Satips.
Don't walk in front of me, I may not follow;
Don't walk behind me, I may not lead;
Walk beside me, and just be my friend. - Albert Camus
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hi
i am searching about screen save code,so i can add to my project
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Please ask in proper forum. this is web developer discussion board. Thank you.
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A screensaver is as an executable with the .scr extension...
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in complement to exit this program when the computer start a job by user, sample when he press a key, you must create a exit method to the next events
Mouse move, key press, key down, etc
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If you want to rotate images as screensaver, you can use Irfanview (http://www.irfanview.com/[^]) to do that.
I also knew of another tool called ScreenWeaver which does this trick but I am not sure of the current URL of this software.
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I get this as a warning in VS2005 when setting the border="0" of an image that is a link (without it theres an ugly border around the image, which I dont want).
Validation (XHTML 1.0 Transitional): Attribute 'border' is considered outdated. A newer construct is recommended
Anyone know how to solve this while getting rid of the "outdated" construct? h
"Okay, I give up: which is NOT a real programming language????"
Michael Bergman
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What about this??
style="border:0px"
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<blockquote class="FQ"><div class="FQA">Psycho-*Coder*-Extreme wrote:</div>without it theres an ugly border around the image, which I dont want</blockquote>
I have tested both ASP.NET image and HTML image as below. I didn't get the border that you mentioned.
eg:
<asp:Image ID="Image1" runat="server" ImageUrl="Winter.jpg" />
<img src="Winter.jpg" />
Maybe. you can try like that if you are still getting the border that you dont want.
<img src="Winter.jpg" style="border:0px" />
Hope it helps.
Thanks and Regards,
Michael Sync ( Blog: http://michaelsync.net)
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actually
<a href="../../about_us.htm" ><img alt="About Us" height="31" src="../../images/nav_images/about_normal.gif" width="74" name="about_us" id="about_us" /></a>
without the border="0" will indeed put an ugly border around the image (when the image is enclosed in an a href tag), it's been that way since the dawn of HTML but the new XHTML validation doesn't allow this. I ended up making a CSS class that has
border-top-style: none;
border-right-style: none;
border-left-style: none;
border-bottom-style: none;
and it got rid of the border. I went with the CSS class so I didn't have to put style="" on every link image in the site (there are 77 pages in the site) and with this class (yes I did have to add the class="" to all the images but if I have to alter/add anything to the images in the future I change the CSS class and not all 77 pages).
"Okay, I give up: which is NOT a real programming language????"
Michael Bergman
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Yeah. Making CSS class is better...
I think you can use this one line border:0px; instead of four lines..
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Or border: none; I think.
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To apply no border on all image use this stylesheet:
img { border:0px; }
(tested on FF and IE)
La Richesse & la Gloire ne griseront jamais que les temples
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Visual Studio 2005 recommends the same via stylesheets.
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dear all,
it was a fine day time when i thought i had completed most of my project on asp.net when i found viruses all over my system. So, i had to copy the project file in a removable drive and format the system. But as i reinstalled the operating system done all the formalities of installing vs.net IDE
and tried to open the same application thinking of completing the same, i got an error for IIS as the same folder was not there in the default web site.
How do i go about solving the prob?
-- modified at 16:48 Tuesday 17th July, 2007
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LOL! This is a programming question...but I'll answer anyway
You didn't copy your "C:\inetpub\wwwroot\Projectname" directory...which contained the asmx files(otherwise known as...ALL THE CODE).
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hi copy the folder to the location C:\inetpub\wwwroot
if posible create a virtual directory
hope it works
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I have tried... sad thing is, I know it's simple..
What is the regular expression characters(s) for "match any number of any characters"?
eg:
Can someone pls give me a regular expression that will return true if the input matches the bignning of the test
eg, I want to test input against "dagwood"
d would match
da would match
dag would match
wood would not macth
xyzdagwood would not match
Fred
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The "*" matches zero or more matches; the "+" matches 1 or more matches, and the "?" matches zero or one matches.
I don't really understand what you want? If you want to find words that either start with d or da or dag this works:
\b(d|da|dag)(?:[a-z]*)
Regex^ rx = gcnew Regex("\\b(d|da|dag)(?:[a-z]*)");
MatchCollection^ matches = rx->Matches("dog daddy dagwood wood xyzdagwood");
for each (Match^ match in matches)
{
Console::WriteLine(match->Value);
}</code>
"We make a living by what we get, we make a life by what we give." --Winston Churchill
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Thanks but... sort of..
.. what you've provided will almost do, but what I need is a genereic expression that says "if what you type in is a match for the beginning of my word ["dagwood" in this example] then I'll return true"
The word dagwood may change though, so I'll be building up the regex dynamically; it may be any length; so I can't explicitly cover all possibilities as in your example.
cheers...
F
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Wouldn't the StartsWith method of the string class do?
---
single minded; short sighted; long gone;
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StartWith what though?
Suppose I want to check their input aganst the word "Dingbat"
they type "x" - I want to return false;
they type "D" - true;
they type "Dx" - false;
they type "Di" - true;
So how would I use StartsWith in this contecxt?
And can it be case-insensitive?
ta...
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Fred_Smith wrote: Suppose I want to check their input aganst the word "Dingbat"
they type "x" - I want to return false;
they type "D" - true;
they type "Dx" - false;
they type "Di" - true;
string word = "Dingbat";<br />
word.StartsWith("x") -> false<br />
word.StartsWith("D") -> true<br />
word.StartsWith("Dx") -> false<br />
word.StartsWith("Di") -> true
Fred_Smith wrote: And can it be case-insensitive?
There is an overload that takes a StringComparison parameter that you can use to control case sensitivity and culture.
---
single minded; short sighted; long gone;
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