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Alan!I wanted to mark ur anwer as reply or sth like that,and I clicked
report this message link
is there any way to undo it?
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Ah, so THAT'S why the Code Project agents showed up at my place with a warrent!
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They both are same. If you are using first one, compiler will give error. But for second one, you will get error only in the runtime.
modified on Tuesday, June 17, 2008 3:18 AM
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Hi,
I have to build a windows application in C#. What the application needs to do is print doc files even Microsoft word is not installed. Do you guys have any solution. Please help me out. Thanks in advance.
regard,
Arslan Ilyas
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.doc is a proprietry format, you need MS word to access it. You may be able to do it with the free "word viewer" but I don't know.
In theory it's possible to reverse engenieer the .doc format and write your own parser to read and print it, but that won't be easy. OpenOffice have obviously done something like that as they can handle word files, so you could start by looking at their source code.
There may be 3rd party libraries out that that provide this kind of functionality (search google), but it's not built into .net as standard.
Simon
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Hi
is there any way to add references to my project by code (at runTime)?
thanks.
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thanks N a v a n e e t h
but i don't compile my app, i want to add reference to my app at runTime, and i don't want to compile any code.
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hi to all
i write some simple webservice in below and put into http://bundi.com/webser.asmx
i take a web refence and created object and it is working fine, plase follow the code and finally please answer my questions
webser.asmx file conetent in which i have in http://bundi.com/webser.asmx
***************
]]>
Imports System.Web
Imports System.Web.Services
Imports System.Web.Services.Protocols
Namespace mysimpleWebService
<webservice(namespace:> _
<webservicebinding(conformsto:> _
<global.microsoft.visualbasic.compilerservices.designergenerated()> _
Public Class webser
Inherits System.Web.Services.WebService
<webmethod()> _
Public Function sum(ByVal a As Double, ByVal b As Double) As Double
Return a + b
End Function
End Class
End Namespace
default.aspx page content
*************
Partial Class _Default
Inherits System.Web.UI.Page
Protected Sub Page_Load(ByVal sender As Object, ByVal e As System.EventArgs) Handles Me.Load
Dim objweb As New summethod.webser
objweb.sum(19.1, 30.9)
Response.Write("sum result is " & objweb.sum(19.1, 30.9))
End Sub
End Class
here my problem are
**********************
1) this webservice accessign directly how i protect this with password the perticular webservice
2) is anything more need to learn about webservice,what other uses , can u explain any thing more to learn web service
This is haneef.............................................................
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Hi all--
I've written a program to transmit data to a RS-232 device and everything was working fine. Now, due to design constraints, the device uses inverted RS-232 logic. I've tried to compensate for this by inverting my bytes before transmission but that doesn't work. Somebody here thinks that my stop and start bits also have to be inverted and thats why the microcontroller isn't picking anything up.
I'm over my head on this one, anybody have a clue if I'm looking the right direction or is what I'm saying sound stupid?
Thanks,
Aaron
modified 12-Jul-20 21:01pm.
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I need some help again...
I need to create a Struct to pass to an Array, trouble is I have NEVER worked with structs. I am not even sure that this can be done. I have read about structs and my understanding about them are that a class uses the managed heap and a struct uses the stack, this makes for a LITTLE performance gain.
I also understand that you can create your own Value Types for example:
My Variable
{
private string myString;
private int myInt;
}
Theoretically this gives me a variable "Variable" that's of type string and int?? Am I in the right direction??
Thanks in advance!!
Illegal Operation
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Illegal Operation wrote: a class uses the managed heap and a struct uses the stack, this makes for a LITTLE performance gain.
It's not true always. It depends on the context where you declare the value type variable. Read this[^]
Illegal Operation wrote: I also understand that you can create your own Value Types for example:
You can create your own structs which are value types.
struct MySampleStruct
{
public int a;
}
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I am working with a component which requires a System.Windows.Forms.Keys value. Right now, the only way I know how to change this value programatically, through user input, is:
if (input == "a")
{
key = Keys.A;
}
I am sure there is an easier way to do this. Can someone help me out?
Thanks in advance.
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Is there a Keys.FromChar or something ? Is Keys an enum and Enum.Parse would do it ?
Christian Graus
Please read this if you don't understand the answer I've given you
"also I don't think "TranslateOneToTwoBillion OneHundredAndFortySevenMillion FourHundredAndEightyThreeThousand SixHundredAndFortySeven()" is a very good choice for a function name" - SpacixOne ( offering help to someone who really needed it ) ( spaces added for the benefit of people running at < 1280x1024 )
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Well, if your in a Console Application then you can use ReadKey which can tell you the key that was pressed.
ConsoleKey thing = Console.ReadKey(true).Key;
The true means that the key the user pressed will not be printed onto the screen.
If you're in a Windows Application then set the forms KeyPreview property to true and use the KeyPress event which will have data on the key that was pressed.
My current favourite word is: I'm starting to run out of fav. words!
-SK Genius
Game Programming articles start - here[ ^]-
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You want to use the Enum.Parse static method
public static object Parse(<br />
Type enumType,<br />
string value,<br />
bool ignoreCase<br />
);
Applying this method to your example goes like this:
key = (Keys)Enum.Parse(typeof(Keys), input, true);
Don't forget to sanitize the input value.
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It doesn't always work (Unicode & foreign languages are the trickiest) but you can simply cast them:
key = (Keys)input;
I doubt it. If it isn't intuitive then we need to fix it. - Chris Maunder
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I tried this and got error CS0030: Cannot convert type 'string' to 'System.Windows.Forms.Keys'
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Input has to be a char not a string . If you know your input will be a string but only one character long then you can use:
Keys output = (Keys)input[0];
I doubt it. If it isn't intuitive then we need to fix it. - Chris Maunder
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I was just doing some google searches looking for ways to improve the GUI of my C# app. I stumbled upon Codejock Software and seen they have some really nice C# components. Right now their CommandBars component is still in beta, but I like what I have seen so far. You can find the beta here: http://codejock.com/downloads/[^]
So what do you guys think of this? Should I use this? Any cons to using a third party component?
Thanks
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gerbiling wrote: Any cons to using a third party component?
No. There are no problems ever. Good luck
led mike
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led mike wrote:
No. There are no problems ever. Good luck
Nice level there. You got just the right mix of sincerity and bitter sarcasm in.
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