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11:00 PM
@ReedCopsey It is in Program Files so it should be 64bit
 
no- the code you're running - is it x86?
(not the Ghostgum program)
if you're is x86, or "AnyCPU Prefer 32bit", you'll be trying to open in Wow6432Node...
if so, this is how to work around it: stackoverflow.com/a/18772256/65358
 
Computer crashed. I'll check when I get it back up. Thank you :)
 
(or flag your program AnyCpu (but without the prefer 32 bit flag) )
 
@drch That sound right?
 
think so
 
11:06 PM
So, I just call the object within the interface. Which will ensure the client can ignore it.
 
right
 
Makes sense, careless and stupid error.
Didn't even think about it correctly.
 
you could still have your original method in the interface if it makes sense to
or it could implement a bunch of other interfaces
but anything thats exposed via an operation contract has to be something that the caller can create, serialize, get to your server, then be deserialized, and passed to the method
in places ive worked where we had a lot of wcf stuff, we had a separate class library for all service interfaces (no implementation) and data classes
so we could actually give that .dll to callers of the service as well
 
Yeah, I actually have two separate projects.
One is for WCF Application; the other is just a generic Class Library.
Yeah, now it appears to be working @drch
 
11:27 PM
sweet
 
@drch Basically, I have the [DataContract] actually in a separate project outside the WCF Service Application Project.
 
yeah thats good
 
Yeah, what I wanted to do is place the Contract in my Framework Library- Then simply inject those contract variables into my ServerInformation Class; because the Framework does all of the core information.
Plus, by abstracting and separating the project you actually can reuse endpoints and contracts.
 
dat url
 
11:33 PM
@ReedCopsey removed the flag and it works :)
 
@Pheonixblade9 shop.com/…
 
@drch hahahahahahahahaha
oh be nice, it's a client
just testing
you can all see that though?
 
oh god
 
lolz
 
11:35 PM
 
@ReedCopsey Thank you!
Microsoft.Win32.RegistryKey root = Microsoft.Win32.Registry.LocalMachine.OpenSubKey("SOFTWARE\\Ghostgum\\GSview", false);
            string s = root.GetValue("5.0").ToString();
 
@Pheonixblade9 Yes I can.
 
@drch I'd like to say thank you for the help with this issue good sir.
 
...should I post moar gifs?
 
11:40 PM
@Greg no problemo
 
Good night all.
I'm out.
 
night :)
 
Night.
 
@Kush Glad it worked
 
@ReedCopsey now I get to put it in an actual app instead of the console app I was working with before :)
 
11:58 PM
So....
saw this
    public string xmlDocToString(XmlDocument xmlDoc)
    {
        StringWriter sw = new StringWriter();
        XmlTextWriter xw = new XmlTextWriter(sw);
        xmlDoc.WriteTo(xw);
        return sw.ToString();
    }
and i'm thinking, was someone getting paid per line of code....
or just plain old wtf smack upside the head by a bus in a tornado...
 
wat
can't see why you'd need a string for processing xml
 
XmlDoc.OuterXml...
 

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