Search Results

Search found 19305 results on 773 pages for 'above the gods'.

Page 181/773 | < Previous Page | 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188  | Next Page >

  • Resize AIR app window while dragging

    - by matt lohkamp
    So I've noticed Windows 7 has a disturbing tendency to prevent you from dragging the title bar of windows off the top of the screen. If you try - in this case, using an air app with a draggable area at the bottom of the window, allowing you to push the top of the window up past the screen - it just kicks the window back down far enough that the title bar is at the top of what it considers the 'visible area.' One solution would be to resize the app window as it moves, so that the title bar is always where windows wants it. How would you resize the window while you're dragging it, though? Would you do it like this? dragHitArea.addEventListener(MouseEvent.MOUSE_DOWN, function(e:MouseEvent):void{ stage.nativeWindow.height += 50; stage.nativeWindow.startMove(); stage.nativeWindow.height -= 50; }); see what's going on there? When I click, I'm doing startMove(), which is hooking into the OS' function for dragging a window around. I'm also increasing and decreasing the height of the window by 50 pixels - which should give me no net increase, right? Wrong - the first '.height +=' gets executed, but the '.height -=' after the .startMove() never runs. Why? update - If you're curious, I'm programming an air widget with fly-out menus which expand rightwards and upwards - and since those element can only be displayed within the boundaries of the application window itself (even though the window is set to be chromeless and transparent) I have to expand the application's borders to include the area that the menu 'pops up' into. In the extreme case, with the widget positioned bottom left, and the menus expanded completely across to the right side and top edge of the screen, the application area could very well cover the entire desktop. The problem is, when it's expanded like this, if the user drags it up and to the right, it causes the 'title bar' area of the application window to move above the top edge of the desktop area, where it would normally be unreachable; and Windows automatically re-positions the window back below that edge once the .startMove() operation is completed. So what I want to do is continually resize the height of the application so that the visual effect will be the same for the user, but for the benefit of the operating system the window's title bar will never be above that top boundary of the desktop area.

    Read the article

  • Conversion from string to type 'Double' is not valid.

    - by Adnan Badar
    Hi, I am getting the following error while running a select statement (using OleDbCommand). My query is SELECT CME FROM Personnel WHERE CME = '11349D' If objOleDbCom.ExecuteScalar() 0 Then When i execute the above statement i got this error Conversion from string "11349D" to type 'Double' is not valid. My field CME data type is Text My database is Access 2007 I tried by running my query directly inside database and it is running fine. Please suggest. Thanks.

    Read the article

  • Save Sql Recordset into the Flat text file?

    - by mahesh kumar
    Hi, i need to dump my sql query result into the text file. i have created the following query, DECLARE @cmd VARCHAR(2048) SET @cmd = 'OSQL -localhost -CRN370 ' + ' -UCRN370 -PCRN370' + ' -Q"SELECT TOP 5 GageId FROM EwQMS370..msgages"' + ' -oc:\authors.txt' EXEC master..xp_cmdshell @cmd, NO_OUTPUT The above query created the text file authors.txt. But the content of the file shows the following error message " Error: Conflicting switches : -U and -E " Any help really appreciated

    Read the article

  • MVVM, Animations, Binding - I need a quick question answered.

    - by Peanut
    http://stackoverflow.com/questions/2455963/wpf-mvvm-dynamic-animation-using-storyboards There is a question i have found that relates directly to the issue I am having. The answer provided in that thread is a bit short, however. I did a little looking on google for 'attached properties' and i still remain a bit confused. Could someone shed a little light regarding this question? Perhaps provide a little sample code for the link stated above? Thanks in advance

    Read the article

  • Labeling a chart in VB.NET (VS 2008)

    - by typoknig
    Hi all, I have created a basic chart in VB.NET (VS 2008) and it is working good, but I would like to label the axies of the chart. The method "AxisLabel" is not what I am looking for. I want to put the word "Dollars" vertically on the far left hand side of my chart (just left of the numbers labeling the "y" axis) and the word "Months" horizontally at the bottom of the chart but above the legend (just below the numbers labeling the "x" axis). Check the picture out...

    Read the article

  • Why won't the following haskell code compile?

    - by voxcogitatio
    I'm in the process of writing a small lisp interpreter in haskell. In the process i defined this datatype, to get a less typed number; data Number = _Int Integer | _Rational Rational | _Float Double deriving(Eq,Show) Compiling this fails with the following error: ERROR "types.hs":16 - Syntax error in data type declaration (unexpected `|') Line 16 is the line w. the first '|' in the code above.

    Read the article

  • UUID collision risk using different algorithms

    - by Diego Jancic
    Hi Guys, I have a database where 2 (or maybe 3 or 4) different applications are inserting information. The new information has IDs of the type GUID/UUID, but each application is using a different algorithm to generate the IDs. For example, one is using the NHibernate's "guid.comb", other is using the SQLServer's NEWID(), other might want to use .NET's Guid.NewGuid() implementation. Is there an above normal risk of ID collision or duplicates? Thanks!

    Read the article

  • How to specify number of headers in section UITableView.

    - by Mr. McPepperNuts
    if ([tempArray containsObject: [sectionInfo indexTitle]]) { return nil; }else { [tempArray addObject: [sectionInfo indexTitle]]; return [sectionInfo indexTitle]; } return [sectionInfo indexTitle]; The code above groups the cells in alphabetical order but displays a blank header instead of the appropriate title. Could this possibly be because I did not specify the number of headers? This would naturally be a single header for every letter in the alphabet.

    Read the article

  • How do you unit test the real world?

    - by Kim Sun-wu
    I'm primarily a C++ coder, and thus far, have managed without really writing tests for all of my code. I've decided this is a Bad Idea(tm), after adding new features that subtly broke old features, or, depending on how you wish to look at it, introduced some new "features" of their own. But, unit testing seems to be an extremely brittle mechanism. You can test for something in "perfect" conditions, but you don't get to see how your code performs when stuff breaks. A for instance is a crawler, let's say it crawls a few specific sites, for data X. Do you simply save sample pages, test against those, and hope that the sites never change? This would work fine as regression tests, but, what sort of tests would you write to constantly check those sites live and let you know when the application isn't doing it's job because the site changed something, that now causes your application to crash? Wouldn't you want your test suite to monitor the intent of the code? The above example is a bit contrived, and something I haven't run into (in case you haven't guessed). Let me pick something I have, though. How do you test an application will do its job in the face of a degraded network stack? That is, say you have a moderate amount of packet loss, for one reason or the other, and you have a function DoSomethingOverTheNetwork() which is supposed to degrade gracefully when the stack isn't performing as it's supposed to; but does it? The developer tests it personally by purposely setting up a gateway that drops packets to simulate a bad network when he first writes it. A few months later, someone checks in some code that modifies something subtly, so the degradation isn't detected in time, or, the application doesn't even recognize the degradation, this is never caught, because you can't run real world tests like this using unit tests, can you? Further, how about file corruption? Let's say you're storing a list of servers in a file, and the checksum looks okay, but the data isn't really. You want the code to handle that, you write some code that you think does that. How do you test that it does exactly that for the life of the application? Can you? Hence, brittleness. Unit tests seem to test the code only in perfect conditions(and this is promoted, with mock objects and such), not what they'll face in the wild. Don't get me wrong, I think unit tests are great, but a test suite composed only of them seems to be a smart way to introduce subtle bugs in your code while feeling overconfident about it's reliability. How do I address the above situations? If unit tests aren't the answer, what is? Thanks!

    Read the article

  • Security review of an authenticated Diffie Hellman variant

    - by mtraut
    EDIT I'm still hoping for some advice on this, i tried to clarify my intentions... When i came upon device pairing in my mobile communication framework i studied a lot of papers on this topic and and also got some input from previous questions here. But, i didn't find a ready to implement protocol solution - so i invented a derivate and as i'm no crypto geek i'm not sure about the security caveats of the final solution: The main questions are Is SHA256 sufficient as a commit function? Is the addition of the shared secret as an authentication info in the commit string safe? What is the overall security of the 1024 bit group DH I assume at most 2^-24 bit probability of succesful MITM attack (because of 24 bit challenge). Is this plausible? What may be the most promising attack (besides ripping the device out off my numb, cold hands) This is the algorithm sketch For first time pairing, a solution proposed in "Key agreement in peer-to-peer wireless networks" (DH-SC) is implemented. I based it on a commitment derived from: A fix "UUID" for the communicating entity/role (128 bit, sent at protocol start, before commitment) The public DH key (192 bit private key, based on the 1024 bit Oakley group) A 24 bit random challenge Commit is computed using SHA256 c = sha256( UUID || DH pub || Chall) Both parties exchange this commitment, open and transfer the plain content of the above values. The 24 bit random is displayed to the user for manual authentication DH session key (128 bytes, see above) is computed When the user opts for persistent pairing, the session key is stored with the remote UUID as a shared secret Next time devices connect, commit is computed by additionally hashing the previous DH session key before the random challenge. For sure it is not transfered when opening. c = sha256( UUID || DH pub || DH sess || Chall) Now the user is not bothered authenticating when the local party can derive the same commitment using his own, stored previous DH session key. After succesful connection the new DH session key becomes the new shared secret. As this does not exactly fit the protocols i found so far (and as such their security proofs), i'd be very interested to get an opinion from some more crypto enabled guys here. BTW. i did read about the "EKE" protocol, but i'm not sure what the extra security level is.

    Read the article

  • NNibernate Reusable QueryOver

    - by colinramsay
    To keep my queries self-contained and potentially reusable, I tended to do this in NH2: public class FeaturedCarFinder : DetachedCriteria { public FeaturedCarFinder(int maxResults) : base(typeof(Car)) { Add(Restrictions.Eq("IsFeatured", true)); SetMaxResults(maxResults); SetProjection(BuildProjections()); SetResultTransformer(typeof(CarViewModelMessage)); } } I'd like to use QueryOver now that I've moved to NH3, but I'm not sure how to do the above using QueryOver?

    Read the article

  • Returning a struct pointer

    - by idealistikz
    Suppose I have the following struct and function returning a pointer: typedef struct { int num; void *nums; int size; } Mystruct; Mystruct *mystruct(int num, int size) { .... } I want to define any Mystruct pointer using the above function. Should I declare a Mystruct variable, define the properties of Mystruct, assign a pointer to it, and return the pointer or define the properties of a mystruct property through a pointer immediately?

    Read the article

  • html.actionlink doesn't passing parameter to controller action

    - by FosterZ
    hi, m having problem in passing parameter to controller action, i have done the following Url.Action("SchoolDetails","School",new{id=item.SchoolId}) and my controller action follows public ActionResult SchoolDetails(string schoolId,_ASI_School schoolDetail) { schoolDetail = SchoolRepository.GetSchoolById(schoolId); return View(schoolDetail); } i dn't know why the schoolId above in action is getting null..

    Read the article

  • CSS Footer Not on same Line

    - by streetparade
    Im trying to write a footer like this one Did i said that im very bad at Css? My css looks like this #footer-navi { margin-bottom:1.5em; padding-bottom:1.5em; } clearfix { display:block; } #footer-group { margin:0 auto; } How can i implement somethin like the footer above? Thanks very much.

    Read the article

  • UILabel not changing when method called

    - by LyonJTill
    - (IBAction)restoreUserDefaults { NSUserDefaults *defaults = [NSUserDefaults standardUserDefaults]; if([defaults objectForKey:@"Exam Name"] == nil) { examName = [[NSString alloc] initWithString:@"Name"]; } else { examName = [[NSString alloc] initWithString:[defaults objectForKey:@"Exam Name"]]; } [examNameLabel setText:[NSString stringWithFormat:@"%@",examName]]; } Hey all, Basically above is the method that is being called when one ViewController is being close and another is being opened the problem is, is that the UILabel in the new ViewController isn't changing to the value i need it to? Any ideas? Regards Lyon J Till

    Read the article

  • Pointing layout_above to an external ID?

    - by Joren
    When I try to use layout_above to position a view above another view, it can't find the ID if it's not in the same XML file. I'm adding my XML files at run time but I still want to be able to position them relative to eachother. Any suggestions?

    Read the article

  • how to get the front window in wxwidgets

    - by Quincy
    In wxWidgets how to get the front most windows on mac? I have a document based application, so each window has a document in it, after change focus, I don't know how to get the front most window. I'm looking for a function like wxGetActiveWindow but the above function only works on windows and GTK, not mac

    Read the article

  • Bipartite matching in Python

    - by vailen
    Does anybody know any module in Python that computes the best bipartite matching? I have tried the following two: munkres hungarian However, in my case, I have to deal with non-complete graph (i.e., there might not be an edge between two nodes), and therefore, there might not be a match if the node has no edge. The above two packages seem not to be able to deal with this. Any advice?

    Read the article

  • iOS User guidelines at startup

    - by user963737
    I was wondering is there a way to give the user a small guided tour of the app with small pops exactly above the UI elements indicating what it will do and not using the standard popups which iOS has. Something like if an icon is used to post status there should be a small pop up on top of it which tells us it is used to post status and can be closed a standard in in games to introduce the player to their UI.

    Read the article

  • C# 4.0 Named Parameters - should they always be used when calling non-Framework methods?

    - by David Neale
    I really this is a hugely subjective topic but here is my current take: When calling methods which do not form part of the .NET BCL named parameters should always be used as the method signatures may well change, especially during the development cycle of my own applications. Although they might appear more verbose they are also far clearer. Is the above a reasonable approach to calling methods or have I overlooked something fundamental?

    Read the article

< Previous Page | 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188  | Next Page >