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He's the worst example of a Help Vampire I have seen in a long time.
This space for rent
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It'll be fun when he gets to the exams and finds he can't ask anyone at all.
All this lack of effort wasted by a fail! :Evil Smiley:
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
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Look at his profile. It says he doesn't have time to fill it in. He's obviously not using that time learning the framework.
This space for rent
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suppose i have a store procedure which has one out type parameter and out type parameter value is set inside store proc so when i will call that store proc by EF code first then how could read the out type parameter value by EF code first ?
looking for a small sample. i search google a bit but found no example. thanks
tbhattacharjee
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Might I makes a suggestion: Amazon: Entity Framework[^].
Serisouly, you're not going to learn this stuff by bombarding the forums with questions. You're going to miss a ton of information that ties all this stuff together.
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suppose i am calling store proc by EF code first and store proc return value like this way
select 'SUCCESS'
or
select 1
OR
Return 1
just tell me how to read the single value return by store proc with EF code first. looking for a small sample code. i search google a bit but found no example. thanks
tbhattacharjee
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Tridip Bhattacharjee wrote: i search google a bit but found no example. thanks Really?[^]. They probably aren't all relevant but Google thinks there are 456,000 items that match.
This space for rent
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We've run into a problem where we're getting a Task Canceled Exception. It seems to occur when
code inside a App.Current.Dispatcher.Invoke... gets executed AFTER App.Current.Shutdown is called.
I really don't want to have to check for the app being shutdown every time I do App.Current.Dispatcher.Invoke.
Any way to stop this?
Thanks
If it's not broken, fix it until it is.
Everything makes sense in someone's mind.
Ya can't fix stupid.
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TaskCancelledException is what is thrown whenever one await a task which is cancelled.
In ContinueWith, however, the Task.Status is cancelled (no exception).
Some system task can, unexpectedly cancel. Find out which task are susceptible to be cancelled and handle the cancellation there. Otherwise it's a legitimate bug.
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please explain that what is difference between LINQ and EF with example. thanks
tbhattacharjee
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Seriously? I just read your question about what the difference is between Agile and Scrum. Have you heard of Google? You have been on this site long enough to know that you should at least think of doing some research beforehand yourself. This is a simple question for you to look up and I would strongly recommend that you learn to do the most basic searches yourself.
This space for rent
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But that would mean doing his own homework...
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
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And stop being a help vampire? Might as well tell the sun to stop shining.
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(Almost) the same as DML and DDL; ok?
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How to generate ID with auto in my program using C# and Firebird database
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Move to the DB forum
Then see this[^]
If it's not broken, fix it until it is
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Try reading the documentation on Firebird. This has nothing to do with C#.
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I asked a similar question a while back and never really got an answer, so I'll try again...
I have an application that has a component that works like DropBox. The user puts a file into a folder and it's copied to the server. Then all other users clients will download the file.
I need to determine the correct way of getting the file onto the server. The file will either be copied to the server or FTP'd in.
I need to determine when to use FTP. Obviously if the user is not connected to the network, then the file needs to be FTP'd in. For example, if the user takes their laptop home or on the road - away from the office - they they are not "connected" to the network and FTP needs to be used.
However, if the user is sitting at a desk in the office, then they are "connected" to the network.
The question is: How do I make the determination to FTP the file or just copy it? How can the app know if it's directly connected to the network?
Thanks
If it's not broken, fix it until it is
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One way you could accomplish this would be to check the DNS resolution of the server. If it resolves to an internal address, then the client is local and would be capable of performing a direct copy.
You could also just simply try the copy, or a less intensive get directory listing using the file path in your application. If that fails, failover to ftp transfer.
Is ftp available both internally and externally? If so, it would probably be simpler to utilize it for both transfers. It seems to me that it really wouldn't matter how the file got to the server as long as it was on the server.
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rhgarner wrote: One way you could accomplish this would be to check the DNS resolution of the server. If it resolves to an internal address, then the client is local and would be capable of performing a direct copy.
OK, how exactly?
rhgarner wrote: Is ftp available both internally and externally?
I thought of doing FTP either way, but internally it just seems like overkill.
If it's not broken, fix it until it is
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Overkill is implementing more than one server and switching on detection of a network.
Just FTP it and you don't have to worry about the connection type at all.
Checking DNS resolution is probably not a good idea. DNS results are normally cached. Checking for active known company gateway addresses is probably a better bet, but if you just implement FTP, who cares?
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Dave Kreskowiak wrote: f you just implement FTP, who cares?
I agree. I guess I'm just concerned about performance issues.
If it's not broken, fix it until it is
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Kevin Marois wrote: How can the app know if it's directly connected to the network? How would you distinguish between the corporate network, and any other network?
Bastard Programmer from Hell
If you can't read my code, try converting it here[^]
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thinking out loud, ip address range 10.b.c.d, 172.16.c.d, 192.168.c.d for instance and/or a dynamic dns check - Im pretty sure I could 99% of the time give a correct answer. I actually have software that checks the network interfaces in use from a PC and if it's the local wifi connection then 'probes' a set of addresses to see which MySQL server is up .. maybe the same approach would help Kevin
is that what were asking him Eddy ?
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