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I have VS2010 SP1 installed on my system. When I open a solution and goto added references, I am unable to view their properties.However I am able to view properties of .cs files.
What is the issue here?and how can I resolve it?
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I'm not sure I understand what you're saying, but...
If I do, the only properties you could possibly view are the file properties of the referenced library.
If that's the case, no, Visual Studio does not show those. Showing those is hardly relevant to anything.
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So I have an app which I am deploying internally using ClickOnce (full trust etc)
I have set the file associations in the publish options dialog on the publish tab but when I come to publish then install it the file associations don't do anything - when I was testing it I had manually set the file associations to notepad - which is how they remain.
Windows 7 helpfully doesn't provide a way to disassociate file extensions but even so - given I have told the clickonce deployment to associate file extensions I would like it not to ignore me.
Anybody any have pointers? I have been googling this all afternoon.
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Hmm, it appears it won't overwrite previously set file associations
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RugbyLeague wrote: using ClickOnce
Mistake #1. Don't.
Use WiX, or Advanced Installer, or InstallShield, or some other dedicated packaging tool and make a proper installation. You'll have to far more control over your setup instead of fighting with the limitations of ClickOnce.
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Can they enable users to install without local admin rights?
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That's not the problem.
No. The only way to do that would be to make every user an Administrator. I don't know anyone today that's going to do that.
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Neither do I. Hence clickonce
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Like I said. That's not the problem.
The problem is you need Administrators or a software deployment system to install the software.
If you don't have Admins that like walking around to every machine installing software, you need a software delivery system to install it for you, like System Center Configuration Manager, or LANDesk, or something similar.
BTW, when a user clicks on a ClickOnce link, the installation is run as the user, not an administrator.
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I am not convinced we are discussing the same subject.
We have SCCM but the people in charge of that tend to only use it for apps rolled out to 100s - my apps usually only target 30 to 40 users - ClickOnce is great for that.
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RugbyLeague wrote: I am not convinced we are discussing the same subject.
Yes, we are.
The problem is that you're running into the limitations of ClickOnce. The only REAL solution to the problem is to repackage using a normal packaging tool. Then you distribute that package using SCCM.
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Except IT in their infinite wisdom won't use SCCM for anything other than apps distributed to 100s.
So far I have been quite happy with ClickOnce - as you say it has limitations but nothing to make it unuseable
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Being a SCCM person where I work (and over 800 applications), I find that ridiculous.
We ship everything, even down to manually installed applications on single workstations.
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I can't say I am happy with it but it is what it is.
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Hi, i'm developping a wpf application and i use an EDM to generate DATABASE,
i have the EDM in a separate class library, and i have added a refernce to my main project and i have added also an app.config in may main project wich contain the connetionstring their. but I am getting the following error when attempting to connect to the EDM:
"The specified named connection is either not found in the configuration, not intended to be used with the EntityClient Provider, not valid."
can i add the connection string in app.xaml??
modified 15-May-12 15:30pm.
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Hello,
i searched about 3 days - i found some scheduler controls, but the problem is i dont know howto work with the functions (save, move)
can you link me a scheduler and write down some functions ?
regards
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How about asking the people who wrote the control for some documentation on it??
I'm not aware of any free scheduler controls, so...
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Parser Error
Description: An error occurred during the parsing of a resource required to service this request. Please review the following specific parse error details and modify your source file appropriately.
Parser Error Message: Could not load file or assembly 'Microsoft.ReportViewer.WebForms, Version=10.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b03f5f7f11d50a3a' or one of its dependencies. The system cannot find the file specified.
Source Error:
Line 1: <%@ page title="" language="VB" masterpagefile="~/MasterPageSabteNam.master" autoeventwireup="false" inherits="printChap, App_Web_printchap.aspx.cdcab7d2" %>
Line 2:
Line 3: <%@ Register Assembly="Microsoft.ReportViewer.WebForms, Version=10.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b03f5f7f11d50a3a"
Line 4: Namespace="Microsoft.Reporting.WebForms" TagPrefix="rsweb" %>
Line 5: <asp:Content ID="Content1" ContentPlaceHolderID="head" runat="Server">
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This pretty much means you don't have ReportViewer installed.
Read this[^].
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tanks
But I put (copy) this file in this folder : Microsoft.ReportViewer.WinForms.dll
,But again, this error shows.
please help because I need to install the program with the right tools like Crystal Report ...
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The error sayd Microsoft.ReportViewer.WebForms.dll is missing.. Notice WebForms. You've used WinForms instead. Judging from the error syntax your project is a WebForms ASP.Net prject.
You should use the right DLL.
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On top of copying in the WRONG .DLL file, there may be other .DLL's that one relies on which you haven't considered. You cannot just copy whatever .DLL file it says it can't find into your project folder and expect it to work. More than likely, you'll be missing other dependent .DLL's that you won't get an error on.
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Hello there.
So, I decided that understood core of .NET. Concretely I want understood .NET functional model step by step.
I have several books about this, I search questions in google and etc...
So, general concept of the .net framework is like this:
1. We write code into high level language;
2. after this language compiler, compiles light level code into IL code. That is called managed module. Managed module contains: PE32 Header, CLR Header, Metadata, IL.
3. After this, AL.EXE ( assembly linker tool ) merges that modules into assembly ( DLL or EXE ) and adding manifest that describes Assembly.
In finish there loads CLR and executes code. But, my question is around managed module.
So, in some book are written that, managed module is a standard PE32 file, In other books written that managed module have a .netmodule extension.
So there is some misunderstanding, what exactly file extension have managed module when it generates language compiler ?
Sorry for my bad English and please help me to understood this point.
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Unless you're doing something funky, you'll never have to deal with netmodules directly. I haven't in the last 11 years of using .NET.
But if you want to dig into it further, read this[^].
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