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Here it is:
http://www.gsgdirectory.co.uk/CGI-BIN/GSGDir.exe?SDETAILSPAGE&NUMGSG=124383[^]
The .NET classes return a different page, to IE.
As I said the WinInet library returns the same page as IE. If you want to test it quickly Chris has built page grabber class in this article : http://www.codeproject.com/internet/webgrab.asp[^]
It uses the MFC http classes which I'm right in thinking use WinInet. Also the VB Internet Transfer control correctly pulls down the page.
Thanks,
Giles
Quote from a clever bloke :
"I know not with what weapons World War III will be fought, but World War IV will be fought with sticks and stones." - Albert Einstein
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Giles wrote:
Here it is:
http://www.gsgdirectory.co.uk/CGI-BIN/GSGDir.exe?SDETAILSPAGE&NUMGSG=124383[^]
The .NET classes return a different page, to IE.
This appears to be happening because of a javascript redirect within the HTML. I'm not sure how WinInet or the VB transfer control handles that. Both HttpWebRequest and WebClient gave the same results. Not the one you are looking for though It could be a frames issue as well.
MyDUMeter: a .NET DUMeter clone "Thats like saying "hahahaha he doesnt know the difference between a cyberneticradioactivenuclothermolopticdimswitch and a biocontainingspherogramotron", but with words you have really never heard of."
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I don't think its the Java script, as what it redirect to is the same. It could be the frames, but I don't see what its trying to pull out.
Quote from a clever bloke :
"I know not with what weapons World War III will be fought, but World War IV will be fought with sticks and stones." - Albert Einstein
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I need to enumerate all the files in a folder, but I can't see how to do this in C#.
In C++ I would just use FindFirstFile(), but I can't find any functions that does that in C#, only a sample about interop/marshalling that shpws how to use the FindFirstFile API.
Is it really true that there is'nt any functions/classes to do that in the .NET framework/C#?
- Anders
Money talks, but all mine ever says is "Goodbye!"
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Take a look at the System.IO.Directory & DirectoryInfo.
Also there is File and FileInfo.
I think you make use of the members of the xInfo class.
e.g.
DirectoryInfo dir = new DirectoryInfo(Directory.GetCurrentDirectory());
Console.WriteLine(dir.FullName);
foreach(FileInfo f in dir.GetFiles())
{
Console.WriteLine("{0} - {1}", f.Name, f.Length)
}
This seems like a pain, but you get used to it.
For a seriously handy class look at System.IO.Path and its static members. Evrey thing you ever needed for manipulation a file path.
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Thanks a lot
Giles wrote:
For a seriously handy class look at System.IO.Path and its static members
Yea, it looks quite nice.
- Anders
Money talks, but all mine ever says is "Goodbye!"
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System.Runtime.Remoting.Channels.Tcp
Compiler flags an error about namespace not found , C#
please help
it gives no error on System.Runtime.Remoting.Channels
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Ayyaz wrote:
System.Runtime.Remoting.Channels.Tcp
I dont know where you get that from...? I dont have it.
MyDUMeter: a .NET DUMeter clone "Thats like saying "hahahaha he doesnt know the difference between a cyberneticradioactivenuclothermolopticdimswitch and a biocontainingspherogramotron", but with words you have really never heard of."
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Add a reference to System.Runtime.Remoting.dll
"These people looked deep within my soul and assigned me a number based on the order in which I joined." - Homer
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O yes
MyDUMeter: a .NET DUMeter clone "Thats like saying "hahahaha he doesnt know the difference between a cyberneticradioactivenuclothermolopticdimswitch and a biocontainingspherogramotron", but with words you have really never heard of."
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I use System.Runtime.Remoting.Channels.Http. It's not listed either, but it seems to work. I've never heard of Tcp, but I bet it is there.
Me, wrong!?! Nah, you just need to change your thinking to make me right.
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hi am making a program for a net acfe and i made it already but 2 problems left:
1- can not make client main form to not be affected when the user press(ctrl+alt+delete) i mean make him unable to c it.
2- how to make a .bat file for sql server database application to be included in the final setupproject.. i ca not find the way for creatin this .bat file.
i'll appriciate any help
DODy
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Try distributing it as a MSI file, so that managing on the remote system would be easy.
You can create a MSI file from within VS.NET.
Deepak Kumar Vasudevan
http://deepak.portland.co.uk/
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I put some codes in the pictureBox_paint(...) to have the pictureBox repainted when needed.[Let's say my application is formA, another application, such as IE is formB]
I found that it repaint the pictureBox correctly when formB is dragged over formA, or when formA is resized. However, if formB is first dragged over formA (overlaid), then minimized, my "paint" codes doesn't repaint the formA.
can some one explain and help me on this? thanks!
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C#
In a WebForm application I need to open a DialogBox for selecting file(s).
Is there a way to open a file browser (not with HTML File Field Control)?
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Hello,
How to add a combo box control to a list view control.
thanks in advance,
chito
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Is it possible to to pass a property to a method and modify that property in a method and expect the modified value to be passed out?
I have the appropriate "set" section for the property and it does not seem to be persisting the change after the method is done.
Any ideas?
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Keep in mind that a property, from a method's point of view, is just another variable. So, you must pass it by reference to get its set{} block called.
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mgarwood wrote:
Is it possible to to pass a property to a method and modify that property in a method and expect the modified value to be passed out?
This will only work for reference types and NEVER for value types unless you specify ref .
MyDUMeter: a .NET DUMeter clone "Thats like saying "hahahaha he doesnt know the difference between a cyberneticradioactivenuclothermolopticdimswitch and a biocontainingspherogramotron", but with words you have really never heard of."
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Hi All
I've some problems with a very large bitmap, with a 30000x20000 size in pixels, this code throws a System.InvalidArgumentException :
<br />
Bitmap bitmap = new Bitmap(30000, 20000);<br />
How can I load and/or create a bitmap with this size ?
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Mohammad Siahatgar wrote:
Bitmap bitmap = new Bitmap(30000, 20000);
OK lets do some math. we have 30000 x 20000 x 4bytes per pixel (This constructor creates a Bitmap with a PixelFormat enumeration of Format32bppARGB)
= 2400000000 bytes
= 2288.818359375 MBytes
Now I somehow doubt anything running Windows can keep something like that in memory... What program are you gonna use to view this?
MyDUMeter: a .NET DUMeter clone "Thats like saying "hahahaha he doesnt know the difference between a cyberneticradioactivenuclothermolopticdimswitch and a biocontainingspherogramotron", but with words you have really never heard of."
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Hi
Adobe Photoshop can easily handle it. But I don't want to view it, just want to fragment it into smaller parts for fast loading.
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Hi,
yes, Photoshop can handle that due to the fact Photoshop implements an own "image-subdivisioning", so it also breaks the image into smaller parts the GDI can handle.
So, if you only want to "break" the image in smaller pieces, I would suggest to you save the image in an easy file-format (e.g. "RAW", "PCX" or whatever you like) and read it completely yourself (means "forget c#, gdi and gdi+ for loading" because that will try to allocate the memory for the COMPLETE image, what's in fact your real problem).
Then if you open the raw file (with your code using 'normal' file-reading using input-streams), you need to decide it how you want to break it. If your image (for example) is in RGB-format, the filesize of the RAW (saved in PShop with "no header") will be imageWidth*imageHeight*3. When you open it, the first imageWidth*3 bytes will be the first scanline of the image (either in RGB or BGR-order, I forget that, but you will realize, don't worry).
If you would decide to break it into smaller pieces of e.g. 100*100 pixels, you need to allocate imageWidth/100 (plus one if imageWidth not dividable by 100 without rest), then read the first scanline (and only the first scanline) and copy the pixeldata into the first scanline of the "piece"-images (first "piece"-image gets the first 100 pixels of scanline, seconds 100 pixels from x=100 to x=199 and so on). If you have read 100 scanlines of the original big-sized image (which is the height of one "piece"-image), you can save the pieces-images to disc (in any other format) and reallocate new piece-images. Then continue until you did that for every scanline within the original image.
But this will only help if you only want to "break" the image in pieces. If you want to display them, you need the information which pieces of the image will be visible and load only them (otherwise the behaviour of your code will strongly depend on settings like virtual memory and so on) and display only them.
hope this helps,
greets,
Danny
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