So, actually, Octave and Dot are actually nearly identical
Octave works fine, but Dot isn't
public List<DotMockup> RightDotSign
{
get
{
List<DotMockup> dots = new List<DotMockup>();
for (int i = 0; i < Math.Abs(Dot); i++)
{
dots.Add(new DotMockup(2, Brushes.Black, new Thickness(4, 0, 0, 0)));
}
return dots;
}
}
public List<DotMockup> TopOctaveSign
{
get
{
List<DotMockup> dots = new List<DotMockup>();
if (Octave > 0)
{
for (int i = 0; i < Math.Abs(Octave); i++)
{
dots.Add(new DotMockup(3, Brushes.Black, new Thickness(0.5)));
}
}
return dots;
}
}
Is staves even the right word? A staff is the collection of lines where you put your notes but I dunno if it only counts for one "line" of lines or the whole sheet
Decide how many octaves above and below you're going (shouldn't be too hard to find the range of a piano) and then decide how many of those you're going to allow on one page
If in one bar they are playing chords with 2 notes and the next they are playing chords with 3 notes, if you align it to the bottom, a) the bottom notes won't be correctly aligned and b) the top instrument won't be aligned
So what I would do is measure the controls as they are added and keep a variable somewhere that will allow you to adjust the height of the spacer accordingly
So if you measure the height of each row for each bar added (a row being one instrument) and then store the highest value, you can work out the height the spacer needs to be
That would keep everything a consistent height across your entire page
And you would have the advantage of then being able to easily measure how many rows fit on a page because you know the height of the sections
Hey André, Denver
Anything past that, and I'm lost
I don't know how you would know if one user control had wrapped on to another line inside a wrap panel
In .NET land, we can copy a file using a Stream and the CopyTo() method. This doesn't however, provide any way to get an update on progress (so I can tell). We used to have to write the method ourselves, passing in chunks of data in a loop. In this manner though, we could report a progress (% complete)
Is there any way of getting a progress using Stream.CopyTo()?
I've created a copy utility in c# (.NET 2.0 Framework) that copies files, directories and recursive sub directories etc. The program has a GUI that shows the current file being copied, the current file number (sequence), the total number of files to be copied and the percentage completed for the ...
To me it seems like it should have been named 8.1.1 or 8.2 at the most. At least from the stuff they have shown. I can't help but wounder what features they had when it was called windows 9
Let's hope there's a lot under the hood that they haven't presented yet
okay... so I have these huge datasets. I want to be able to enable users to undo changes they made. Should every change to the dataset be stored in the database as a transaction with a copy of the old data? Is there a better way to do this?
If you need auditing/history/rollback, it needs to be stored somewhere. I'm not aware of a better way of doing it other than storing the changes in the DB