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Hi guys
Does anyone know where we can find very accomplished Biztalk developers and architects? We have a nice opportunity for them over here....
thanks
steve
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Sure - try posting this on monster.com or the like. Now stop spamming the board. Just go away and pay for job adverts like everybody else does you cheapskate.
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well thanks for that attempt at communication... )
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When we want your opinion we'll give it to you.
Until then go hang out with some of your management monkey peers, feed them some bananas and you will get all sorts of excited grunts of useless comments out of them.
led mike
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sksassociates wrote: Does anyone know where we can find very accomplished Biztalk developers and architects?
Yep! Somewhere on this planet called Earth.
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Dave Kreskowiak wrote: this planet called Earth
How about Universe? Often there are stories that people from Mars visit Earth through UFOs right?
Vasudevan Deepak Kumar
Personal Homepage Tech Gossips
A pessimist sees only the dark side of the clouds, and mopes; a philosopher sees both sides, and shrugs; an optimist doesn't see the clouds at all - he's walking on them. --Leonard Louis Levinson
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You may like to email webmaster (at) codeproject.com to see whether they would consider having your requirement onto their Jobs Board. That would give you a more powerful and potential reach.
Vasudevan Deepak Kumar
Personal Homepage Tech Gossips
A pessimist sees only the dark side of the clouds, and mopes; a philosopher sees both sides, and shrugs; an optimist doesn't see the clouds at all - he's walking on them. --Leonard Louis Levinson
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Hi all,
I'm trying to create a second (or third, or however many needed) AppDomain in which to host some Windows Forms. I can create the second AppDomain and the form object just fine. The problem is with actually showing the form. Basically the form partially draws itself and then hangs. I suspect maybe this has something to do with the STAThreadAttribute. What do I need to do to allow the window to run correctly in the second AppDomain?
Thanks,
Brandon W.
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I'm using AppDomain.CreateInstance()
Then I'm unwrapping the ObjectHandle, and calling Form.Show().
Pretty much every example I've been able to find hasn't dealt with creating UI objects in another AppDomain. I'm pretty sure this would work fine, if it was just a plain old object.
BW
(Looking at that link now...)
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I might be able to use ExecuteAssembly, but it's going to take a bit more work than I want. I'll try it out.
BW
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Does anyone have any tips or tricks to speeding up the page load on a SQL database website.
Thanks
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Learning wrote: Does anyone have any tips or tricks to speeding up the page load on a SQL database website.
No. No one knows how to do that. And if anyone did it certainly would NOT be Microsoft and they certainly would NOT document it and you certainly could NOT find it by searching with Google.[^]
Good luck, you're going to need it.
led mike
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It's good to see that your mockery battery is fully charged.
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mock mock, who's there? Me, i keel you!
led mike
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If that heading caught your attention...
Good - I was trying...
If you know of any solutions to having such a big setup or
distribution file for my c# app could you please help me?
Perhaps some way of building a setup that only embeds the needed
libraries for my app... I dont want any online installers... just the
smallest possible deployment of my application.
Thanx in advance guys!
Dax
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You're best option is to include a link to the .NET Framework runtime installation. Your app's setup size would already be as small as possible as a seperate install.
Your only other option would be to use one of the tools that compiles the required .NET assmeblies into your .EXE, but be prepared to shell out BIG money for these tools. There are no free ones that do this...
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Take a look at NSIS. Provides a very small self-contained executable for installing stuff.
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I thought he was complaining about the "weight" of the .NET Framework runtime install...
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Oh well, perhaps one or both of us mis-interpreted the question...
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Or we didn't miss it and the OP did??
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Yeah, of course, we're valuable members to CodeProject so we're right by definition
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Given the code below, the first line is drawn 1 pixel longer than the second line (any line where width > 1 is drawn 1 pixel short). Any idea what might be causing this or is this normal behavior?
Pen p = new Pen(Color.Black, 1);
e.Graphics.DrawLine(p, 10, 10, 10, 100);
p = new Pen(Color.Black, 2);
e.Graphics.DrawLine(p, 14, 10, 14, 100);
p.s. The same thing happens when drawing horizontal lines.
Kees
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that is the normal behavior: the pen moves the way you ask it to move; when its size
exceeds one, it will hit some pixels before and after the intended trajectory since
a pen by default has a circular shape. I guess you can modify both the pen characteristics
and the way lines are drawn though, if you really need to.
Luc Pattyn [Forum Guidelines] [My Articles]
This month's tips:
- before you ask a question here, search CodeProject, then Google;
- the quality and detail of your question reflects on the effectiveness of the help you are likely to get;
- use PRE tags to preserve formatting when showing multi-line code snippets.
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Thanks Luc,
Setting EndCap and StartCap to LineCap.Square solved it.
Kees
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