I was working at a fast food place. The computer ran a MUD and Counter-Strike, my only entertainment at the time. When the monitor went I was really bored. I probably would have ignored a warning label if it were there.
So I'm using a Factory to create a VisualTree. and I don't understand (I'm totally new to this) how to set a value... factory.SetValue(Ellipse.WidthProperty, 8(?));
well I have a ListView that I wan't to be able to populate with different types of data.... I have a panel that I wan't to be generic to different types of data. And my thought was to locate the dataTemplate in the "data provider". In that way my panel (and ListView) don't have to care what kind of data it is... only that the data provider also provides the dataTemplates (and ViewColumns...)
i am working on a feedback form in which user has to answers question asked in form. and he can't refresh and close the form before saving data but if user do that i want all the form data to be saved in database till that time.
so for that i am using pagebeforeload event. and using jquery ajax ...
@Sisyphe I can with almost all certainty say no to that question, I don't really know what that means. But judging by the complexity of doing it this way, it doesn't seem likely that I'm doing it the correct way... :)
@Markus ok let me sum this up : you have a ListView, but you have different kinds of object in the Items collection and you want to use different datatemplate depending on the object type, and the listView column ?
@Sisyphe Yes, but not at the same time. I have two kind's of data that I wan't to handle in almost the exact same way, so I wan't to use the same panel (or UserControl) to handle them both (so I don't have to duplicate code). So in one case I will fill my control (with the ListView) with one type of data and another time I will use the other type of data
however, is there a special reason to override like that instead of just keeping it in a different property and keeping in sync with items as per your rules
@Sisyphe actually I have a UserControl with some ListViews (containing users) and also other lists with two different kinds of groups (to which the users can be associated)
@Maverik Isn't that what a shallow copy is? Maybe I used the wrong terminology? What I meant was that if you have List<object> foo filled with objects then doing var bar = foo.ToList(); will contain the same objects as foo so a change made to an object in foo will be reflected in bar...
@Maverik var doug = new MyObject(value: 3); var foo = new List<MyObject>(); foo.Add(doug); var bar = foo.ToList(); doug.Value = 4 then foo[0].Value == 4 and bar[0].Value == 4yes?
well thats more or less just a thought that I had that I wanted the dataprovider (or model as I call it) to supply the all the needed things. In that way my control could be totally unknowing of the data it shows, just as long as the model complies to a specified interface
ok, so but what I can see here is that I would probably help if I new more about the MVVM, so is there any good mvvm intro video (youtube) preferably not too long
quick! go get some pink paper and when everyone is away from their desks fold the paper into a 'note' and leave one on everyones keyboard for when they return
@dav_i sorry about my late replies - I'm not on my machine, but yes that is shallow copy. my real question was, why not just use the same object across the two lists? one object can be part of two lists right? (though this shouldn't affect ur original issue but might be worth a try)
My form isn't always submitted when I hit the submit button.
On my form I have one submit button. When I first hit the button, the form will submit. But when there's a validation error, the error is shown. But when I fix that error and press the submit button again, the form is not submitted. Th...