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nope, absolutely wrong...
TVMU^P[[IGIOQHG^JSH`A#@`RFJ\c^JPL>;"[,*/|+&WLEZGc`AFXc!L
%^]*IRXD#@GKCQ`R\^SF_WcHbORY87֦ʻ6ϣN8ȤBcRAV\Z^&SU~%CSWQ@#2
W_AD`EPABIKRDFVS)EVLQK)JKSQXUFYK[M`UKs*$GwU#(QDXBER@CBN%
Rs0~53%eYrd8mt^7Z6]iTF+(EWfJ9zaK-iTV.C\y<pjxsg-b$f4ia>
--------------------------------------------------------
128 bit encrypted signature, crack if you can
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I want to Search Yahoo group member Email Id.
and post Message to all member in Dot net windows application .
Please Help Me
Thanks
<div class="ForumMod">modified on Friday, January 23, 2009 3:58 AM</div>
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A few seconds search on Yahoo (suprisingly) shows loads of info on using the yahoo groups api. Have you tried there?
Bob
Ashfield Consultants Ltd
Proud to be a 2009 Code Project MVP
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Yaar pura question to padh liya karo....
Don't walk as if u rule the world,walk as if u don't care who tha Hell rules the world ...
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inzibharti wrote: Yaar pura question to padh liya karo....
Bob
Ashfield Consultants Ltd
Proud to be a 2009 Code Project MVP
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Hai friends,
In my small application iam retrieving the links stored in the IE's favorites folder and write to .doc file. i want to set hyperlink to each of them. Please help me.
Regards,
DJ
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use link label. Did you use it.
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i dont know how to use it..
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I can write hex numbers as 0x which range from 0x0 to 0xF
How can I write octa numbers which range from 0 to 7 (Adding 1 to 7 should result 10)
I could do this in C.
Sandeep Bhutani
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Octal number must begin with 0.
For example, 017 is a value 15.
«_Superman_»
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This did not work. I tried int i=010 which should be equal to 8 but was 10.
I also tested in Debug window but 0 prefix has no effect
Sandeep Bhutani
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Sorry, I gave you the C/C++ solution.
In C# you can use Convert.ToInt32(10.ToString(), 8)
Here 10 is the octal number and 8 represents the base (Octal).
«_Superman_»
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Ew, but yeah it may come to that. There's still gotta be a better way.
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It seems that the word "octal" doesn't appear anywhere in the C# spec.
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there are no "binary" or "hex" leywords either, but that doesn't stop us from using whatever we want as a number base.
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As a matter of fact, I use beer as number base.
If the Lord God Almighty had consulted me before embarking upon the Creation, I would have recommended something simpler.
-- Alfonso the Wise, 13th Century King of Castile.
This is going on my arrogant assumptions. You may have a superb reason why I'm completely wrong.
-- Iain Clarke
[My articles]
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That won't cut it. Nobody would trust you dealing with beer-based numbers.
The way I know you, you would soon prove infinity does not exist.
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Actually, I'm trying to reach infinity, but......... hic! ........... another one, plz plz!
If the Lord God Almighty had consulted me before embarking upon the Creation, I would have recommended something simpler.
-- Alfonso the Wise, 13th Century King of Castile.
This is going on my arrogant assumptions. You may have a superb reason why I'm completely wrong.
-- Iain Clarke
[My articles]
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Absolutely, great for bubble sorts without the expense that champagne incurs or the sugary-sweetness of cola.
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No, but the words appear in the spec, as in:
binary-operator-declarator:
type operator overloadable-binary-operator ( type identifier , type identifier )
decimal-integer-literal:
decimal-digits integer-type-suffixopt
hexadecimal-integer-literal:
0x hex-digits integer-type-suffixopt
0X hex-digits integer-type-suffixopt
Not so for octal.
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Actually, binary operators is a misnomer IMO; it really are bit-level operators meaning all the bits have independent meaning and behavior, there is no link to base 2 there.
I would not mind C# supporting binary and octal literals, hence also a convention to indicate those bases; and support for it in TryParse and ToString.
However I would very rarely use it; octal is thing of the past; some instruction sets got described in octal (e.g. PDP8 and PDP11), which looked OK at the time mainly because they had 8 registers so it was a signle digit that chose the register).
Binary notation tends to lack compactness; with a comma every 4 bits, an Int32 would take 39 characters.
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Luc Pattyn wrote: binary operators
... operate on two operands. You know that.
Luc Pattyn wrote: supporting binary and octal literals
The C way of indicating octal literals is problematic. C# leaves it out, but that means that code copied from C will be broken with no alert.
I expect 0o10 would be better, with a warning if someone uses a capital O rather than a lowercase o , as with the l to indicate long.
Luc Pattyn wrote: octal is thing of the past
Yes, the only time I need octal is for OpenVMS UICs, and I still do see why they have to be done in octal.
Luc Pattyn wrote: Binary notation tends to lack compactness
Yeah, gimme Base-64 any day!
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PIEBALDconsult wrote: binary operators
... operate on two operands. You know that.
Yeah, I used to known that (seems like the flu is not really helping me);
"binary operators" too is unrelated to base 2.
and bit-wise operators it the right term for some of the (mostly binary) operators
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C# does not have octal literals(unfortunately). But we do have it in VB. So you have two ways:
1. Create a VB dll and refer it C#.
2. Get the data in string and write your own method to convert it to Octal.
The word "politics" describes the process so well: "Poli" in Latin meaning "many" and "tics" meaning "bloodsucking creatures."
जय हिंद
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