|
Did you miss my joke icon? I was having a (rather weak) go at sledge's "zero sense" comment.
Peter
Software rusts. Simon Stephenson, ca 1994.
|
|
|
|
|
I meant your C# and XAML code. How are you populating the combobox, what kind of properties / styles does it have set, etc?
|
|
|
|
|
thanks all. It is just a test software, and now I use selecedindex instead of text property. and the problem is fixed.
|
|
|
|
|
OP + wit => rating += 5;
"I have always wished for my computer to be as easy to use as my telephone; my wish has come true because I can no longer figure out how to use my telephone." Bjarne Stroustrop circa 1990
|
|
|
|
|
Have you considered posting this in the WPF[^] forum?
Ideological Purity is no substitute for being able to stick your thumb down a pipe to stop the water
|
|
|
|
|
I am trying to launch csript as an administrator (the account logged in has admin rights). setting the startinfo.verb to runas does not work.
ProcessStartInfo p1 = new ProcessStartInfo();
p1.UseShellExecute = true;
p1.Verb = "runas";
p1.FileName = "cscript";
p1.Arguments = "I:\\WPKG\\wpkg.js /synchronize /quiet /nonotify";
Process p = new Process();
p.StartInfo = p1;
p.Start();
The only way I can get it to start with privileges is to manually set the username and password. However I cannot hardcode that information or put it into configurations. Is there any way to have the cmd elevate without the login info?
I have also tried adding using (System.Security.Principal.WindowsIdentity.GetCurrent().Impersonate()) around the above code with no luck either.
|
|
|
|
|
There's a post[^] on the "Hey, Scripting Guy blog" that discusses running an elevated cscript.
Bastard Programmer from Hell
|
|
|
|
|
|
What happens when you don't supply username and password?
Mark Salsbery
|
|
|
|
|
Has anyone ever "caught" a messagebox before it spawned in a 3rd party dll, and just put the text value to a variable?
I have no input or way to change this unmanaged dll, and I would like to use the data returned to a messagebox, instead to my code and not in a messagebox. It appears that a winapi hook might be a good way to do this, but I am not sure. Thanks for reading.
|
|
|
|
|
Hi guys!
Am currently writing some code for creating Word files dynamically.
Have to embed OLE Objects such as PDFs.
This works fine up to the moment where I have a corrupted file which can not be embedded.
Used try/catch by the InlineShapes.AddOleObject() Method, but a messagebox is presented and the program stops until I hit ok.
Is there a chance to do the errorhandling for this?
Thank you in advance!
|
|
|
|
|
Greeting.
I have a handheld device (a Motorola mobile device for barcode scanning). I have a sample program to control the camera. This program is a Windows form program.
Now I have to turn this sample program into a library. My client will use the library to integrate into their (mobile) program.
I have never turned a Windows form program into a library, so I am not sure if it is possible. I have, however, turned a simple program which does not have any visual element into a library before.
Questions:
1) Can this be done? How? If there is a sample, that would be great. 2) Does custom Windows control work for me? If yes, please illustrate.
Really thank you for your help. I am kinda stuck.
|
|
|
|
|
Any .Net assembly can be used as a library, if you provide a public API (beyond a Main method) into it. In the simplest case, you can just send them the .exe and they can reference it as a normal assembly and start using the public classes inside it. However, since it has presumably been written without that in mind, there may be some redesign you need to do to make it useful as a library. If you've properly separated UI and business logic in the first place, and haven't internalised everything (that's simple enough to reverse anyway), it shouldn't be too hard – just think about what classes and functionality needs to be available to a library user and make sure they are exposed as public.
|
|
|
|
|
I am a little unclear here: you comment that you: "turned a simple program which does not have any visual element into a library before." I believe you imply that you could use that with no problems ... in some context ... but we don't know if you actually used that library on the specific device you mention, a "bar-code" device.
And, we don't know if your WinForms program is controlling the Motorola device through some protocol, or usb or serial connection, or if the device is actually running some flavor of Windows (CE ?).
So, I'm not clear if your current WinForms program contains visual elements, or not, and whether you are asking if those visual elements can be translated onto the device about which I don't know enough to speculate about.
So, a few more details, please.
best, Bill
"I have always wished for my computer to be as easy to use as my
telephone; my wish has come true because I can no longer figure out
how to use my telephone." Bjarne Stroustrop circa 1990
|
|
|
|
|
Bill,
I think the rule for posting here is to keep it simple. And I think I have done it in my original post. As all I want is to ask how to turn a WinForm application into library.
OK. Here is all the glory detail if you don't mind bored.
I have a Motorola bar-code scanning device. I have two programs. One is to read RFID. Another is to use the camera. Both programs are in dot net.
My task is to turn these two programs into one library. My client will use my library to intergrate into their existing application. That application, I assume, is to be loaded into various mobile devices.
I am connecting to the Motorola device via USB.
1) RFID
The original program is a WinForm application. The real logic to read the RFID consists of several library calls. It is nothing more than just:
if (!RFID.Connected())
{
if (RFID.Open(sError))
{
if (RFID.ReadTagID(sTagID, sError))
{
MessageBox.Show("Tag ID: " + sTagID)
}
else
{
MessageBox.Show("Read error: " + sError)
}
else
MessageBox.Show("Open error: " + sError)
}
}
I am able to extract the above code into a class library. The class does not inherit anything.
using Motorola_Lib;
namespace Moto_RFID
{
public class myReadRFID
{
public bool Read(ref String sTagID, ref String sError)
{
}
}
}
Then I create a WinForm program. In there just one button to call the Read() function above.
2) Camera
I have the camera program already. Unlike the RFID logic, which is just to use some function calls from a library, this camera program uses some Windows controls.
Now anyone has any idea on how to turn this camera in WinForm aplication to a library?
And how to test?
|
|
|
|
|
This is what I would do:
1. create a DLL project that holds all the RFID and camera code excluding any GUI stuff.
2. create a EXE project that offers a front-end to demo/test the DLL from #1.
Together, these basically include the code you have now.
Any other app interested in RFID and/or camera should just reference the #1 DLL.
In other words, extract your GUI stuff, keep it as a demo/test bed, and offer the remainder as the solution.
Note: you could of course also have two DLL projects in #1, keeping RFID and camera code strictly separated.
|
|
|
|
|
Luc,
Yes I understand this principle - exclude the GUI stuff and leave that to the testing program. I think I run into a logic problem. If I have to provide / control Camera functionality, I really do have to provide a GUI. At least I have to provide a viewfinder / preview of the image.
I may be wrong. If one can provide functionality to take picture AND without GUI, please let me know.
|
|
|
|
|
if your functionality requires a GUI part, then you need to investigate what technology would suit your end-user application, and provide something that fits that.
Example: for a WinForms environment, you could offer a DLL that holds a Control (actually a UserControl) which does both the GUI and the actual actions as required. And you would probably still want a demo/test exe.
|
|
|
|
|
biop.codeproject wrote: I think the rule for posting here is to keep it simple. And I think I have done it in my original post. As all I want is to ask how to turn a WinForm application into library. There is a difference between keeping a question 'simple,' and providing enough information so that potential responders understand the basic usage scenario well enough to give relevant answers, links to resources, or ask focused questions that further advance you towards your desired goal.
If you were posting on a "dedicated" Motorola Bar-Code tech-support forum, of course you could take it for granted that readers would know you were speaking of using a device "remotely." ... Unless Moto was now offering some new portable wonder that was running Win CE, or Win Whatever, that included a dedicated bar-code readers, and was capable of running a WinForms CE app ?
You have still not answered the significant question of whether you intend for your Class Library to include any Forms: that is a possibility. Personally I would not include a Form in a Control Library, but would make a UserControl (or hack a UserControl so it sub-classed Form), based on my preference that a Class Library include only code.
This subject: building a Class Library with/without a Form in it has been recently discussed here.
My only intent in asking you to clarify the scenario was to be helpful, and, imho, your original scenario description was quite ambiguous.
best, Bill
"I have always wished for my computer to be as easy to use as my telephone; my wish has come true because I can no longer figure out how to use my telephone." Bjarne Stroustrop circa 1990
|
|
|
|
|
In the solution explorer, right-click the project name, select Application, in the Output Type select Class Library. Done.
|
|
|
|
|
This isn't really helpful. All that does is compiles the assembly as a DLL, not an EXE. The EXE can already be used as a library, and the things that need to be done to make it a successful library have nothing to do with what extension you give it.
|
|
|
|
|
Dear All,
I am scratching my head about 4 hours to get this sorted, but without any luck.
what i would like to do is on my windows form, it connects to a remote machine and then display all the programs that installed on a windows server 2003 box on a ListBox, then user can select one of the program, and click the Uninstall button to uninstall the selected program.
I am able to load all the programs installed on the remote machines by this code:
public static ArrayList GetAppLists(string p_machineName)
{
RegistryHive hive = RegistryHive.LocalMachine;
RegistryKey subKey;
string displayName, displayVersion, keyNameCurrentMachine32;
ArrayList al = new ArrayList();
keyNameCurrentMachine32 = @"SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Uninstall";
using (RegistryKey regHive = RegistryKey.OpenRemoteBaseKey(hive, p_machineName))
{
using (RegistryKey regKey = regHive.OpenSubKey(keyNameCurrentMachine32))
{
if (regKey != null)
{
foreach (string k in regKey.GetSubKeyNames())
{
using (subKey = regKey.OpenSubKey(k))
{
displayName = subKey.GetValue("DisplayName") as string;
displayVersion = subKey.GetValue("DisplayVersion") as string;
if (!string.IsNullOrEmpty(displayName))
{
al.Add(displayName + " " + displayVersion);
}
}
}
}
}
}
return al;
}
but when i try to uninstall the particular progarm by this code:
private void UninstallProgram()
{
ConnectionOptions connection = new ConnectionOptions();
connection.Username = txtDomain.Text + "\\" + txtUserName.Text;
connection.Password = txtPassword.Text;
connection.Impersonation = ImpersonationLevel.Impersonate;
connection.Authentication = AuthenticationLevel.Packet;
connection.EnablePrivileges = true;
ManagementScope scope = new ManagementScope(@"\\" + cbServerAddress.Text + "\\root\\cimv2", connection);
ManagementObject app = new ManagementObject(scope,
new ManagementPath("Win32_Product.DisplayName='WinRAR 4.01 (32-bit)', DisplayVersion='4.01.0'"),
null);
MessageBox.Show(app.ToString());
if (app != null)
{
ManagementBaseObject outParams = app.InvokeMethod("Uninstall", null, null);
MessageBox.Show("finished");
}
else
{
MessageBox.Show("cant find app.");
}
}
it always returns "Invalid parameter", and the place throws exception was here:
ManagementObject app = new ManagementObject(scope,
new ManagementPath("Win32_Product.DisplayName='WinRAR 4.01 (32-bit)', DisplayVersion='4.01.0'"),
can someone in here assist me or point me to the right direction will be greatly appreciated.
Many thanks.
Andie
|
|
|
|
|
no one had any clue or i just posted in the wrong section of this forum?
|
|
|
|
|
Hello . I need to use MS Word in my program . i want to create a ms word file from my program and let my user to write his writing or letter or everything and save this document into my database . I do not know how to do this . For example my user wants to write a letter to his boss . so i want to give ability to write it and save that n my database . I do not want to store the address of files . i want to store the whole document in XML datatype Even its template .
so can you help me ?
thanks
|
|
|
|
|
Just start with the basics. Here[^] is a good article on Word Automation to start you off.
When I was a coder, we worked on algorithms. Today, we memorize APIs for countless libraries — those libraries have the algorithms - Eric Allman
|
|
|
|