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It is a variable and it is returning an array of Process objects.
You can access a Process object from the array like this:
Process p = localByName[0];
You can loop through the array like this
for(int i=0;i<localByName.GetLowerBound(0);i++)
{
}
"Do unto others as you would have them do unto you." - Jesus
"An eye for an eye only makes the whole world blind." - Mahatma Gandhi
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hi,
how can i dequeue object from a Queue when the elements type of the queue is a structer?
for example, i use the following code to Enqueue the object 'new_object' which type is ABCD :
ABCD new_object=new ABCD();
MyQueue.Enqueue (new_object);
how to Dequeue?
this method doesn't work:
ABCD another_object=new ABCD();
another_object=MyQueue.Dequeue ();
any help?
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sultan_mu wrote:
MyQueue.Dequeue ();
Dequeue() returns an object, so you need to cast back to the original object type.
another_object = (ABCD) MyQueue.Dequeue();
James
"I despise the city and much prefer being where a traffic jam means a line-up at McDonald's"
Me when telling a friend why I wouldn't want to live with him
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Thank u James..
now it's work!.
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How can we get the DHTML object model as we do using IWebBrowser2 & IPersistStreamInit in COM?
Regards,
(a.k.a. Wal2k) www.wal2k.com
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Can you tell me how to create a completely hidden windows form. I'm using it just for its message pump. I best I can do at the moment is hide from view, taskbar but no the Alt-Tab menu. And the user can still close it when it has focus and using Alt-F4.
I'm using a hidden form as I want to pass data using BeginInvoke between threads.
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Well, have you thought of setting the forms visible property to false before calling its show method?
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That doesn't work! Calling show just set visible back to true. Also the form still shows up in the taskbar and Alt-Tab menu. Instead I'm just using a Control instead of a Form.
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I'm not sure exactly what you are trying to do, however, do you need to call Show? just instantiate the form, then do what you need.
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I have a problem .. One of my applications is loading DLLs into memory but isnt unloading it.
I want to wirte a program that will get the address of a particular DLL loaded into memory and then unload it...Any ideas ?? Is it possible
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curiousgal wrote:
One of my applications is loading DLLs into memory
By DLLs are you meaning .NET Assemblies or are you meaning C/C++ DLLs?
Once .NET Assemblies are loaded into an AppDomain they cannot then be unloaded unless you unload the entire AppDomain. Not sure what you can do if it is a C/C++ DLL, you could try calling FreeLibrary but there might be hidden functionality relying on that DLL still being loaded.
James
"I despise the city and much prefer being where a traffic jam means a line-up at McDonald's"
Me when telling a friend why I wouldn't want to live with him
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When I use SOAP format or binary format ... C# error that : ImageList is not mark as serliazation ....? How to mark ImageList as serlization ????
- what is PublicTokenType ?
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I have a COM object that returns a binary string in a BSTR. .NET marshals this to a string. The problem is that some of the bytes get dropped when this happens.
As an example, load a PFD file into a byte array. Convert the byte array to a string, and then convert the string back to a byte array (UTF-8). If you compare the two byte arrays, they aren't the same.
I probably haven't explaied this very well, but I hope I haven't made it too confusing. Has anyone had any experience with this, and what can I do to make it work?
Thanks.
They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.
--Benjamin Franklin, 1759
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Do you mean PDF file? If so what has loading the file got to do with COM? I have written quite a bit of code moving, loading PDFs etc. And I do it as Streams and byte arrays and have yet to see a problem.
Perhaps if you explain in more detail I may be able to help.
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The COM object creates the PDF file on the fly. It's a third party control, so there isn't too much we can do about it.
I think my example of loading and manipulating a PDF file isn't the best example, because it doesn't really simulate the problem.
However, just out of curiousity, is there anything wrong with the following code:
<br />
pdfFile.Read(pdfBytes, 0, length)<br />
<br />
string pdfString = Encoding.UTF8.GetString(pdfBytes);<br />
<br />
string pdfBytes2 = Encoding.Unicode.GetBytes(pdfString);<br />
At this point, pdfBytes and pdfBytes2 should be the same, correct? This is not the behavior I'm seeing. I'm new to C#, and probably have made a very obvious mistake, but I would really appreciate someone pointing it out to me.
They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.
--Benjamin Franklin, 1759
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Hmmm, not sure why the behaviour would be like that. I never have to convert the byte array in a string. I just carry it around till I have to write it out. I am not sure what happens behind the scene when the byte array is converted to a string. Maybe some stuff does not convert. What if you create a byte array with simple text or numbers and try the same. If that works then maybe its something in the PDF that does not convert well to a string. Just guessing. Sorry could not be of more help.
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Unicode is UTF-16, which may be slightly different from UTF-8.
"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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The interop part of marshaling the BSTR to a string was working ok. The problem was with the conversion from a Unicode array to a byte array. The correct converstion is:
<br />
byte[] pdfBytes = Encoding.Convert(Encoding.Unicode, Encoding.Default,<br />
Encoding.Unicode.GetBytes(pdfString));<br />
What I had been trying to convert to UTF-8, which was what was causing the problems. Converting to Default solved the problem.
Thanks for all the comments.
Dan
They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.
--Benjamin Franklin, 1759
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Thanks for posting the solution. Am sure I will need it one day.
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I'm currently converting some Java code to C# and
if have problems converting this:
Java:
public class MySuperClass {
String generateShowMe() {
return "ShowMe from MySuperClass";
}
public void ShowMe() {
System.out.println(generateShowMe());
}
}
public class MyChildClass extends MySuperClass {
String generateShowMe() {
return "ShowMe from MyChildClass";
}
public void ShowMe() {
super.ShowMe();
}
}
When i call MySuperClass.ShowMe() i get of course
"ShowMe from MySuperClass", but when i call
MyChildClass.ShowMe(), i get "ShowMe from MyChildClass".
-> although the child class calls the base (super) class to show the string, the super class calls generateShowMe() from the child class.
How can i to this in C#?
(i currently simulate this, by using a delegate to call generateShowMe())
thanks,
Carsten
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I think you mean
base.ShowMe();
"When the only tool you have is a hammer, a sore thumb you will have."
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obsolete - don't won't to blame my self
see Richard Deeming post for a working sample.
(I'm not a friend of editing post after someone answered it, but i am to "embarrassed" about my post
Thanks to Philip Fitzsimons and Richard Deeming.
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Could be something to do with the fact that MyChildClass.generateShowMe returns "ShowMe from MySuperClass" instead of "ShowMe from MyChildClass" .
cabo wrote:
public class MyChildClass : MyBaseClass {
protected override string generateShowMe() {
return "ShowMe from MySuperClass";}
public new void ShowMe() {
base.ShowMe();}
}
"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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lol
"When the only tool you have is a hammer, a sore thumb you will have."
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This should work:
C#:
public class MySuperClass
{
protected virtual string generateShowMe()
{
return "ShowMe from MySuperClass";
}
public virtual void ShowMe()
{
Console.WriteLine(generateShowMe());
}
}
public class MyChildClass : MySuperClass
{
protected override string generateShowMe()
{
return "ShowMe from MyChildClass";
}
public override void ShowMe()
{
base.ShowMe();
}
}
"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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