Assuming I have View1 and View2 in my WPF project. Now from WPF View1 , I want to go to View2 via Click event . How will I do that? I already tried stkContent but doesnt work.
The nice people at the programmerchat section of reddit have asked me to do an Ask Me Anything, and of course I am happy to do so. Thanks to reddit for the invitation. For those of you unfamiliar with the … Continue reading →
In summary what constitutes a Liskov Substitution Principle violation?
Throwing Not Implemented Exceptions.
Making use of Method Hiding (the New keyword on virtual methods)
Making use of array covariance on public return types
Violating the implied or documented behavior of a base class (returning null instead of empty lists for example)
I'm following this tutorial which uses the WebAuthenticationBroker to provide authentication on Windows Phone 8.1 apps. But when I test the app, I get an error relating to the URL shown below.
I've tried both debugging solutions outlined in this question, to no avail.Also my app ID is correct in...
I was wondering if any of you have some time to talk with me about a value converter I implemented, and maybe give me some advice about making it a little easier to use
so a quick run through.... I have an app that will be used to read and write settings to these devices... there are dozens of values, everything from SSID, to baud rate. Each setting has its own control someplace in the app. I need to have the ability to provide visual feedback that a value has been changed by the user.
To do this I wrote a value converter called BooleanToBrushConverter that converter is designed to be used in conjunction with a Boolean property that the Background or Foreground of a control is bound to. It works perfectly, and even accepts parameters for the colors to use defined in the markup
the thing is, the way I have it now, for every single control that holds user values I have to implement a Boolean property
and there are lots
I was wondering if maybe you have done something similar and maybe have a sneaky way of overloading the function of a single property... like using a Dictionary or something to make that a bit less to implement across the application
where SelectedNetworkMode is a type with properties Value and Changed
it doesn't invoke the Setter in my VM for the property anymore
that seems wrong to me anyway
maybe I implement INPC in the ValueField object (the type of SelectedNetworkMode)
well I figured out that is the case
now my issue is the damn enums
cant make the class generic because I cant use the == operator... so I tried a where T : class in the class declaration, but I cant put enums in it
arg
C# enums are abysmal
lol
:D in case anyone wonders.... this works:
public class ValueField<T> : INotifyPropertyChanged
{
private T OriginalVal;
private T _Value;
public T Value
{
get
{
return _Value;
}
set
{
if (OriginalVal == null) OriginalVal = value;
_Value = value;
if (_Value.GetType().IsValueType)
{
Changed = !_Value.Equals(OriginalVal);
}
else
•If the current instance is a reference type, the Equals(Object) method tests for reference equality, and a call to the Equals(Object) method is equivalent to a call to the ReferenceEquals method
cos others may not know ReferenceEquals is something that comes from Object? much like people don't seem to know Object.Equals is what really powers == under the hood generally :)
(and thus == is really powered by Object.ReferenceEquals under default implementation)
all I'm saying is, when you don't like default reference equality and you want framework to consider something else for equality - you can make it do that
when you need that kinda thing, you can look up IEquatable<T> - until then, feel free to ignore this :)
I asked the same thing a while ago here
There isn't a built in Index property, but you can set the AlternationCount of your ItemsControl to something higher than your item count, and bind to the AlternationIndex
<TextBlock Text="{Binding
Path=(ItemsControl.AlternationIndex),
RelativeS...
well i think you've got a good handle on .NET stack, for the most part. probably not your only skill set. you did say you were on job sites deploying and what not. i wouldn't want to tell a casino client that we were going to bring in just an ordinary Software Engineer to help... instead, WE ARE GOING TO BRING IN A SENIOR SOFTWARE ENGINEER!
so nothing gets fixed until i fix it. nothing gets done, whatsoever, until i done it... naw sayinnn.
i had a sales question that should have been able to been answered in 5 minutes...
turns out nobody knows how to use sales software except people in sales, and sales were the people that i didn't think knew what they were talking about, so going to them didn't help... now that its all said and done, I know how to use the sales software and figure out anything i'll ever need to know... now how do i catch up on those 2 days lost?? lol
look at this one... service team is telling the person that is supposed to be the SME on the software dealing with their product, but he/she is asking me what might be going wrong... typical response, "maybe try to install it then uninstall it"
its a single folder with an exe... there is no installer lol
@BradleyDotNET what i mean by that is pulling up part numbers, work orders, purchase orders, bills.
i'm glad i don't have to pull up source code to figure out the part number for a screw lol
;)
in other words, the ERP system.
I have an email chain that is about 20 e-mails long that jumps around from sales, purchasing, engineering, systems, board of directors, accounting, development... all because i wanted to do one thing--remove something from a sales order.
that lead into finding out the order wasn't charged to the right account, and sales submitted the wrong order form, so purchasing goofed on some of the parts which means engineering had to change part numbers, which requires service to get involved for an RMA, and I needed a director to oversee the right account was charged by accounting....
and in this section Very Simple Validation: ExceptionValidationRule
author gives a simple example for binding which lacks OnPropertyChanged
@BradleyDotNET would you be able to tell me why it's not there? I might be confusing so many things at the same time but i would appreciate it if you point it out
public class Customer
{
private string _name;
public string Name
{
get { return _name; }
set { _name = value; } // <- here is the setter I mean
}
}