|
Kevin,
I'll post a reply here when I post the code.
modified 27-Feb-21 21:01pm.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Hello All,
I was assinged to create/find a silverlight application which should be like media player.
I got success in getting application from here.
When I downloaded it and run it on my machine it runs well, but as I tried to create web Part for the same it does not display anythind in the Web Part.
While debugging (using alerts) I found that the function in StartPlayer.js file EePlayer.Player._getUniqueName("xamlHost"); returns nothing and hence it is not displaying anything.
Now as I am very new to silverlight and also for Javascript I stuck up here.
Can anyoine please let me know what should I do to make it run in SharePoint Web Part?
Thanks in Advance
Paras Kaneriya
Paras Kaneriya The difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has its limits.
|
|
|
|
|
Hello,
The ID of the DIV where you host Silverlight content might be changed in SharePointWebPage. Can you please view the code at runtime and find out what the actual id is?
|
|
|
|
|
How can one apply an application style to the Common Dialogs? I've got a dark style going on in my app and this file open dialog is so bright it is jarring. Any ideas?
<br />
Microsoft.Win32.OpenFileDialog dlg = new Microsoft.Win32.OpenFileDialog();<br />
dlg.FileName = "Document";
dlg.DefaultExt = ".txt";
dlg.Filter = "Text documents (.txt)|*.txt";
<br />
Nullable<bool> result = dlg.ShowDialog();<br />
<br />
if (result == true)<br />
{<br />
string filename = dlg.FileName;<br />
}<br />
Sincerely,
-Ron
|
|
|
|
|
Ron,
Dialog boxes are generally styled according to the operating system, as opposed to the UI that opened them since the users desktop theme will be used to style the dialog box. Example, Windows XP and Vista File Open dialogs look and work slightly different and are styled according to the users desktop theme.
If you check out the WPF SDK, there is a Vista Bridge library that gets you going with using dialog boxes that are operating system specific. I have been hoping that Microsoft would bake operating system dialogs into .NET so that no matter which O/S was running the correct dialog for that O/S would display without a lot of extra work on the developers part.
You "could" always write your own... No fun working with the Win32 API if you don't really have to.
Sorry I could be of more help.
modified 27-Feb-21 21:01pm.
|
|
|
|
|
Even for a message box?
Sincerely,
-Ron
|
|
|
|
|
Ron,
Yes. Give this article a look: http://www.codeproject.com/KB/WPF/WPFTaskDialogVistaAndXP.aspx[^]
This is where you need to make a decision. You can have all custom dialogs or use the operating system ones.
For the message boxes, I wanted my XP users to have the rich features of the TaskDialog so I wrote the above library to provide that.
I also have similar boxes for my file dialogs.
modified 27-Feb-21 21:01pm.
|
|
|
|
|
What is equivalent in WPF for WindowsForms` TreeView property ShowLines?
Thanks for help
|
|
|
|
|
Don't know but Bea Costa has a great blogspot that shows how to hide/show the expander:
http://www.beacosta.com/blog/?cat=7[^]
Perhaps there is a similar pattern for which you seek.
Sincerely,
-Ron
|
|
|
|
|
Please advise how to draw bars/rectangles depending upon the appointment we have entered in schedular.I 24 Listboxes for each hour in DayView now.
|
|
|
|
|
aruna_koride wrote: depending upon the appointment we have entered in schedular.I 24
Can you be more specific. Not sure which product you are needing help on. What is the schedular? If that is a third party control, you would probably get much better help posting to the vendor, since we may not have that control.
Have a nice day,
modified 27-Feb-21 21:01pm.
|
|
|
|
|
Hi Karl
Its not 3rd party control.I am developing it.I have right now few Listboxes joined together to enter appointments, but i want to show boxes/bars same like outlook calendar if tasks are repeated instead of repeating the TEXT.
Hope u understood.
Please advise
|
|
|
|
|
I noticed a link was provided in a below reply.
If this link does not help you, can you post an image or mock up of what you are trying to do? This will help us, help you.
modified 27-Feb-21 21:01pm.
|
|
|
|
|
|
You may want to consider using a Grid inside a ScrollViewer.
The Grid provides a very easy way to have two rows per hour like the picture and then you can add columns as required for each of the actual schedules.
The wrapping ScrollViewer allows you to contain the grid in a certain amount of space and then have the user scroll up and down.
Then add child border controls that span the required number of Grid.Rows. For example, if you have a 2 hour appointment then you would add that border control and have its RowSpan property set to 4. You can style the border control any way you want.
You can then add a TextBlock that displays the text of the appointment. If you have multi-line appoinments you can use some cool features of WPF inside your TextBlock to display formatted text.
Check this very simple example out:
<TextBlock>
<Run FontWeight="Bold">Mole</Run> loves the managed heap<LineBreak />
I hope this helps you get started!
</TextBlock>
modified 27-Feb-21 21:01pm.
|
|
|
|
|
Hi karl
Thanks a lot for your advise.I will try it out
|
|
|
|
|
|
Hi Ron
Thanks for the link.I will try to use it.
|
|
|
|
|
Hi All,
Not been around here for a few weeks as I've just become a Dad!!
Anyway ... I'm just looking for a few pointers and wotnot on how best to approach this task. I'm currently starting work on my second WPF application for my employer and one thing I want to do is before moving either project forward any more is to standardise the look and feel between the two (and obviously any future applications). Also this means that other developers here can just plug in a set of standard styles and get to work on the logic rather than worrying about the look and feel (my job largely!).
The most obvious way would be to have a 'Styles' project in a separate Visual Source Safe project with a <controlname>.xaml file for each control (like combo.xaml, textbox.xaml etc) ... or just one large style.xaml containing all our style code (this could however become a very large single file!).
What I'm wondering is before I start on this as a project in its own right is there a better way than just having xaml files? Would it make sense to build a style.dll that could be plugged into any application that would only provide styles and control templates for consumption by other developers?
We are using the Infragistics controls here and they provide a similar approach whereby we could build theme.dll's for our users to then select a theme for their instance of our application. I think that from a consumption point of view that is a much neater solution.
Thanks in advance for any input.
Jammer
Going where everyone here has gone before!
My Blog
|
|
|
|
|
First of all, congratulations. Boy or girl?
Secondly, we use a set of themes and load them in dynamically. The advantage of this is that we can change/upgrade applications merely by changing the themes. It's a convenient way to "freshen" up an application without having to manage lots of different codebases.
|
|
|
|
|
Hey Pete,
Its a lil girl! So cool ...
How do you store all the theme code though? Are you using DLLs that are distributed with your applications?
How do you manage that within a multi developer environment?
Jammer
Going where everyone here has gone before!
My Blog
|
|
|
|
|
Jammer wrote: Are you using DLLs that are distributed with your applications?
Yup.
Jammer wrote: How do you manage that within a multi developer environment?
By having a designer come up with the themes.
|
|
|
|
|
Ahh ok ... theme DLL's it is then. I thought that would be the best solution to this particular issue.
Thanks chap.
Jammer
Going where everyone here has gone before!
My Blog
|
|
|
|