Which name is more consistent with .NET naming standards for properties and methods?
1.
public string XRef { get; set; }
2.
public string Xref { get; set; }
I am writing a C# application and I would like to make calls to different matlab functions simultaneously(from different threads). Each Matlab function is located in its own compiled .net library. It seems that I am only able to call one Matlab function at a time however.
ie, if matlab_func1() gets called from thread1 then matlab_func2() gets called from thread2, matlab_func2() must wait for matlab_func1() to finish executing.
Is there a way to call different matlab functions simultaneously? Thanks.
Hello,
.NET 4.0
I am looking for the easiest way to generate a Word document on our server.
Limitations :
Server side
I don't want to install word on the server
Data source is XML
I tried to generate a DOCX with XSLT which is fast and easy but the only way I could find to validate the generated document is to open it with Word and the only error I get when the document is not valid is "Error while opening document". Not very useful.
Any ideas?
Thanks,
Alex
my client is asking for windows 7 like look for my desktop application (developed in c#.net). please tell me how can i set such theame for my application so that i would look like windows 7... please tell me if any such a controls/theame available... (open source is prefered)... please help me out..
I am an experienced C/C++/C# programmer who has just gotten into VB.NET. I generally use CType (and CInt, CBool, CStr) for casts because it is less characters and was the first way of casting which I was exposed to, but I am aware of DirectCast and TryCast as well.
Simply, are there any differences (effect of cast, performance, etc.) between DirectCast and CType? I understand the idea of TryCast.
In order to return a value from a VB.NET function one can assign a value to the "Functions Name" or use "return value."
I sometimes see these inter-mixed in the same function. Personally, I prefer the return.
My question is, what is the internal difference, if any, between the two?
What's the best way to approach using Mercurial (HG) programmatically from C#?
I will be creating HG repositories, committing, and using other default HG functions. Are there are open-source .NET libraries that would allow me to do this?
Thanks in advance.
Hello,
this should be pretty simple but I don't get it. How can I draw a single point in .Net? If I use g.DrawLine(Black,0,0,0,0) nothing is drawn and if I use g.DrawLine(Black,0,0,1,0) a line with 2 dots is used. The same happens with g.DrawRectangle. This has me intrigued.
Thanks in advance.
Assume you are taking over a legacy .NET app. pre - 3.0
What are the top 5 diagnostic measures, profiling or otherwise that you would employ to assess the health of the application?
I am looking for ways to store data in a windows form application in .NET.
I want to make the input data of a system persistent, so when I close my program and open it again, the data is retrieved.
Which ways are of doing this besides creating a linked database?
Examples are gladly appreciated
regards
I want to use code access security and add code modify group. but I dont see .NET Configuration Tool in the administrator tools.
so where can I find this tool?
Thanks in advance.
The question I always wanted to ask and was afraid to, actually - what language is .NET Framework written in? I mean library itself.
It seems to me that it was C and C++ mostly. (I hope Jon Skeet is reading this one, it`ll be very interesting to hear what he thinks about it)
Hi,
I've been using CruiseControl.NET for continuous integration and such. Now I want to be able to deploy projects with it. What is the preferred way of doing this? Do I make a new project which I 'Force Build' to deploy?
I really don't want to deploy on every successful commit.
Please share your thoughts.
Hi,
I'm writing an application in wpf that uses MVVM. I wondered if I could use ado.net entity data model as a model in MVVM? Is it the same? If not, why?
Thanks for any help.
Regards,
Ev.
I'm implementing serial key functionality in my application. User needs to enter at least 64bit number in order to register the application. Because typing number like 9,223,372,036,854,775,807 will take a while I want to compress it a bit. The first guess was to code this number hexadecimally but it still is quite long (0x7FFF FFFF FFFF FFFF).
Is there any standard method in .NET to code this number alphanumerically using for example: digits, upper-case and lower-case characters?
What .NET method has this error message: "Object cannot be cast from DBNull to other types"
The stack traces have been stipped from my logs so I'm looking for a starting point.
I need to print the contents of a datagridview, simple text in rows and columns, with GDI+ in .NET to paper.
To do this, I need to iterate over the rows, draw lines, iterate over the columns, calculate width, height, wrap the contents if contents do not fit on one line, etc. This is all possible, but is there a library that simplifies the drawing of tables in GDI+ and abstracts some of the difficulties away?
I have converted a PowerBuilder application to 11.5 .NET. When it builds, it compiles into a DLL, an EXE and a bunch of “netmodule” files. Are the netmodules necessary for deployment, or just part of some intermediate step? Is there any way to get the compiler to build me one DLL for each pbl (PowerBuilder library)?
i published an application in vb.net. the user will be able to install the application anywhere they choose on the computer (or perhaps not anywhere they choose but where ever the default location is). how can i programmatically get the location where the user installed the application? another words i need the application to know where it is running from. how do i detect that?
Hello everyone, I am trying to figure out the best way of getting the record and update in to gridview using ado.net entity framework in C#. I need implement Next & Previous button in gridview and based on pagesize i want to navigate records using Next&Back button. Any one give simple example for this context.
Is there a way to tell the .NET to allocate a new object in generation 2 heap. I have a problem where I need to allocate approximately 200 MB of objects, do something with them, and throw them away. What happens here is that all the data gets copied two times (from gen0 to gen1 and then from gen1 to gen2).
I would like to make notice of some wierd thing. I designed an entire package application using VB.Net in Visual Studio 2008. I changed the normal backgrounds to Black, to make a diffrerence. but the problem is i1mm getting changing back ground colors when i install it on other systems.which does have all supports required.
What should i do to supress this problem.