The binding wouldn't have worked anyway. By the way, use ObservableCollection instead of List, so when you change the ObservableCollection, UI is updated
In order to synchronize two properties, a third object is created : a Binding
the Binding object has two references : the Source object and the Target
it has two additional references : a DependencyProperty of Target (TextProperty, ContentProperty, etc), and any property of Source
Source must either implement INPC (INotifyPropertyChanged), or its property must be a DP (DependencyProperty)
When you write Content={Binding Money}
You create a Binding object and put it in the Content property
the four references are :
Target : the object where the binding is declared (moneyLabel)
TargetProperty : the property where the binding is declared (Content)
Source : if not specified, it is the DataContext of the Target (so, in our case, it is your Game object, thanks to DataContext inheritance. Remember, you wrote DataContext = game)
SourceProperty = the property of the Source. in our case, it is the Money property
It would have perfectly worked, but since, in your constructor, you wrote : moneyLabel.Content = "$ " + thisGame.Money;
You removed that Binding object
and put "$50" instead, inside the Content property
as long as the Binding object is inside the property of the Target object, it works, and it keeps the synchronisation active
I am working on a Windows Phone 8 project which has a PCL project as its business layer. The business layer project is shared with the Android(Xamarin) project solution, and uses a HttpClient which we realized is not available in WP 8 projects.
So according to the blog here we decided to go with...
hi guys, im trying to send some keys to an external windows without setting it as foreground windows, and my windows app sends sometimes 1927 (which is good), but sometimes sends 19927 (wrong), or (19227)..its not good, can someone help me? picpaste.com/pics/b-fExjoHF4.1409563753.png
The intended window is unknown, but you want to send a key stroke to a specific window without making it the foreground window. Ping me again when you start making some sense, will ya?
or:
private void GetSomeFruit(int a, int b) {
GetSomeFruit(a,b, null); // or whatever makes sense as the default value for abc
}
private void GetSomeFruit(int a, int b, bool? abc) {
// new implementation here
}
We're building a web API that's programmatically generated from a C# class. The class has method GetFooBar(int a, int b) and the API has a method GetFooBar taking query params like &a=foo &b=bar.
The classes needs to support optional parameters, which isn't supported in C# the language. What's ...
Is there a benefit to instantiating if you were doing maybe 10 method calls or would it be fine to just call static methods from the class where possible?
@MarkLi don't worry lol, I'm asking my own question atm :D
I am working on a Windows Phone 8 project which has a PCL project as its business layer. The business layer project is shared with the Android(Xamarin) project solution, and uses a HttpClient which we realized is not available in WP 8 projects.
So according to the blog here we decided to go with...
@drch Aye, I tend to find I make decent decisions that conform to best practices without often understanding them, hence I ask a lot of theory questions :D
The best debate I started was the debate about using constants haha
um, i'd just like to know whether or not anybody in here uses third party ui controls... I made a control suite, and now that I think about it im not sure if I should bother releasing it cause people are moving to wpf now
Hi everyone, just a quick question: I'm planning to use Entity Framework 6 - when deploying my application, should I also install EF on clients? I.e. must I deploy EF dependencies to each machine that will use the application?
All third party dependencies are to be deployed to the client, that includes EF and other junk you reference. The sole exception are the build-in .NET framework assemblies (for now).
You are not. But whether or not the third party dependencies are included is up for debate -- copy to output folder can be disabled, he can be making an installer, etc. He has to know they have to be there, one way or another :-)
Well, don't become a slave. I just graduated as well, but with 10+ years of experience I expect to be treated well, and subsequently, paid decently as well.