|
I want to have a series of small icons in an image list that i can display in any colour. ImageList has BLEND25 and BLEND50 but no easy way as far as i can tell to use the mask as the shape but draw it in any colour that i choose.
By the way i'm working in unmanaged C++ and MFC.
Ideas/answers anyone?
|
|
|
|
|
An article or sample about Least Recent Used Cache or other caching algorithms would be good to read in my opinion.
Orcun Colak
|
|
|
|
|
Goal:
I want to be able to use the Crystal Reports designer, construct a report, drop that report on the client's box, and magicly that report appears as a menu Item under the reports section or appear in some UI of the client's program.
Problem:
Rpt files can store user parameters, and data.
Goal two:
I want to have my application read the .rpt extract the user parameters and display some gui to get information, and then call the viewer with the information already filled out. Additionally since the database location is stored in the rpt file I would need to change that pointer to point to the client's database. (the Client might be using his/her own local db)
Request:
Can we reverse engineer the .RPT format? There is ~5 sections to the file, Root, contents, Data(tlv),Summary. These four I think are just pointers into the final section called Report information.
|
|
|
|
|
Use An inifile for the setup info of the crystal report before invoking it
PS
|
|
|
|
|
Is it really this easy? I wonder if I can shoot a fly with a .45 cal an inch and a half away.
Are you familar with this process? could you give me a few more pointers?
|
|
|
|
|
You don't need to reverse engineer the RPT format anyway. CR7 and later provide an API to do all of the hard work for you, and there may even be samples on their website.
You could put the reports in an app-specific folder, do a FindFirstFile/Next block to get the names, then open each one and dig out the info for it into a list.
Steve S
[This signature space available for rent]
|
|
|
|
|
Hi,
I am in need of a device driver for Win NT , that connects a PC to a cellphone,through serial Port, to get GPS info from the cellphone.
Can Anybody help?
Thanks a lot.
suguna
|
|
|
|
|
Just a guess, but maybe Microsoft ActiveSysnc would help you.
|
|
|
|
|
Hello, the codeproject around the world.;)
I remembered that Chris Maunder and Rick York were talking about the online
game issue in somewhere of Codeproject web site.
Then, I didn't ask them if this online game means the stand alone on line
game or the game throught the web site?
Since I got the source code of the simple Osero game, I have a mind to
challenge that I make this game "online game" by WinSock or CAsyncSocket.
Anyway, I'm wondering that Codeproject keeps considering online game issue?
Please, don't send me your email about your questions directly.
Have a nice day!
Sonork - 100.10571:vcdeveloper
-Masaaki Onishi-
|
|
|
|
|
hello sir ..
I require some help from the programmers. I want to have a program which could scan all the HDD present in the network with thier Volume Serial Number ....since Volume Serial Number is the only way to uniquely identify a HDD
and store the output to a Microsoft Access Database file.
At a particular amount of time it should tell that a particular HDD with this volume serial number is connected or not?
can u get me the code using WMI ....and getting the information in an access file.
--thnx
waiting for a quick reply...
|
|
|
|
|
drmzunlimited wrote:
At a particular amount of time it should tell that a particular HDD with this volume serial number is connected or not?
can u get me the code using WMI ....and getting the information in an access file.
I haven't looked recently through the WMI, however I believe this would be your best bet. There is also commerical software available that allows you to track this and other information on your network.
Nick Parker
|
|
|
|
|
I am learning "operation research" now.and I need some code for it. I have had many time to fine in the internet,but all this in vain.Who can tell me where can find them,or tell me some websits about "operational research"! Thank you a lot!
All This Is Only Mine!
|
|
|
|
|
http://groups.google.com/groups?hl=en&lr=&ie=ISO-8859-1&q=operation+research&sa=N&tab=wg
|
|
|
|
|
Getting value from stuff you don't own is a compelling
idea. Just think, someone else has created something
that has value, and has made it available to you. You
can now leverage its value in ways that makes all
parties richer. That's the promise of web services.
You need to know about web services. The advent of
standards-based web services marks a new era of
system development. First mainframe, then client-server,
the Web, now web services makes it possible to leverage
every legacy system of the past and do so much more
with your information assets.
Architag Press, a division of Architag International
Corporation, announces the publication of Web Services
Implementation Guide, Volume 1: Getting Started, by
Brian E. Travis and Mae Ozkan.
Sample chapters of the book is available at
http://www.architag.com/press/wsig.
This book will show you what a web service is, and
how you can align your internal systems and external
trading partner interactions to take advantage of this
new concept in system integration.
You will learn about the "Three Steps to Web Services":
* Automate internal systems
* Determine integration points
* Expose integration points as web services
This book is for systems architects, developers,
and I.T. decision makers.
Highlights in this book:
* Written in a light, entertaining style.
* Emphasis on architectural design for web services.
* A tutorial on the state of web services standards.
* Plenty of real-life examples of web service use.
* Tutorials on the key technologies: XML, SOAP,
WSDL and UDDI.
* Code samples of key XML-based web services
technologies and extensions.
* Companion Web site with all code samples and
late-breaking information.
----
Download sample chapters of Web Services Implementation
Guide at http://www.architag.com/press/wsig/.
Stanford Powers, Publisher Architag International Corp
Phone: 866-898-0001 Outside US: +1-303-426-3126
Email: spowers@architag.com Fax: 720-294-1396
|
|
|
|
|
Recently I ported a payment gateway's COM server to a native .NET version, meaning that it can be deployed on regular .NET hosts without requiring it to be regsvr'd etc.
Anyway, I will definitely write it up shortly -- how the requests are generated etc, how it communicates and then parses the results.
I then thought it would be cool to develop a ServicedComponent derived class to include transactional support -- as a small sample of how it could be used for an eCommerce site using ASP.NET.
It wouldn't include any of the shopping cart/department type code, just the order processing part.
I was wondering whether people would be interested in such an article, and whether there was anything they'd like to see included.
|
|
|
|
|
I'd really love a series about learning MFC. The whole site is mainly about it and I found no tutors teaching MFC basics (I know I can draw a dialog, double click something and write the proper question, but what about DDE (I've read something somewhen but maybe it's obsolete now) and what is what in the code generated? I know that CListView.AddItem stand for ListView_AddItem macro, but that's not enough... there are also newbies around. Help us!
|
|
|
|
|
Should you not have any joy here, check out MSDN's tutorials. Okay, their not great, but they do give you enough to get started.
http://msdn.microsoft.com [^]
Dylan Kenneally
London, UK
|
|
|
|
|
Like there weren't any tutorials (in MSDN) on shell and all the other stuff here . Okay, but it's your choice and youngsters choose community that behaves most well to them (and I don't say CP doesn't, just that "go and see MDSN" is something I couldn't surely have figured out myself)...
|
|
|
|
|
Stick with CP mate, it's the best coders site there is. I was merly trying to be helpful whilst you wait and see if MFC tutorials appear, and you get your experience level up.
Dylan Kenneally
London, UK
|
|
|
|
|
Sure I will ...
|
|
|
|
|
You ought to purchase "Programming Windows With MFC" by Jeff Prosise (Microsoft Press) best money I ever spent.
-Ken Mazaika
|
|
|
|
|
|
Please ask a more detailed question. What exactly would you like to know? Then perhaps several people will divide the work between themselves and write several tutorials. Be specific
|
|
|
|
|
I want to know what is the difference between coding a MFC dialog app and a MFC MDI or something. I want to know what exactly the gray code means so I will never get lost. I want to know the basic and, if there is some, advanced architecture...
Thanks
|
|
|
|
|
I'm with kmaz. "Programming Windows with MFC" by Jeff Prosise has been very helpful for me. I've just started out with the MFC stuff myself and have learned everything so far from that book, CodeProject and www.codeguru.com. It may take some digging and playing around, but the answer always within those resources somewhere. Trolling the messageboard is quite useful as well, although I wish the search capabilities were a little better.
Good Luck!
PS. MSDN good
BW
{insert witty/thought-provoking saying here}
|
|
|
|