I have a List called dayList which has 12 dates in it. I am trying to Bind this List to a GridView Column.
GridView2.DataSource = dayList;
GridView2.DataBind();
for (int i = 0; i < dayList.Count; i++)
{
Label lbldate = (Label)GridView2.Rows[i].FindCon...
Can anyone tell me why im getting a nullrefernceexception when trying to get data from a database and display them in different texboxs and dropdownlists?
@SaiefAl-Faour i have two dates 12-03-2013 and 15-03-2013 now and i see data between these days Select * from table where date = 12-03-2013 BETWEEN date = 15-03-2013
Okay thats a guess... but try to srite DropDownListPriceType.SelectedItem.Value = sqltype.Type; after DropDownListPriceType.SelectedItem.Text = sqltype.Type;
Hi all, any idea what this error could refer to? The interwebz are insanely vague about it. The runtime has encountered a fatal error. The address of the error was at 0x59d45d64, on thread 0x91c. The error code is 0xc0000005. This error may be a bug in the CLR or in the unsafe or non-verifiable portions of user code. Common sources of this bug include user marshaling errors for COM-interop or PInvoke, which may corrupt the stack.
guys... i need to submit a description about my software at my college ... but i have never written one in my life .... so any tips on how to write one..
ah... do u populate your DropDownListCalculationPer before u set selectedItem.text? cause if not then ofcourse it will fail
DropDownListCalculationPer.selecteditem will choose item with lowest index, and if there are none, then it will call uor friend null refrence exception
@Ahadaghapour I usually play it safe and use the Add Existing Item option in the context menu. I never really understand what happens with dragging-and-dropping to Solution Explorer.
http://www.c-sharpcorner.com/UploadFile/casperboekhoudt/CreatingandusingResources11282005051810AM/CreatingandusingResources.aspx So you did something like this? And what's the problem with the conversion?
I've made a new proyect on Visual Studio 2010. It's a Windows Forms one, and done with .NET Framework 4 Client Profile.
I've put on it a embeded WAV sound file.
The only thing that I want to is to copy it to some path, let's say desktop as example. How can I achieve this?
I've already tried th...
when trying to set up MS Server 2008, it asks for SQL Server 2008 Installation Media and I have to browse for a folder. anyone know which folder I have to choose?
We are closing in on the actual requirements of the "monad pattern". So far we've seen that for a monadic type M<T>, there must be a simple way to "wrap up" any value of T into an M<T>. And last … Continue reading →
Do you write comments in the middle of a statement like
var item =
(from o in _currentList // query current list
where o.Foo == Bar //where Foo is the current Bar
select o).ToList(); //convert to list of o's. Should only be one result.
In my opinion, that's way too much comment. I rather have one line describing what the code block does. But then, everyone has his own style and justification for it.
your code should be self documenting, which means that your comments shouldn't describe your code, your code should do it its self. comments should describe WHY you did what you did
don't do X dogmatically... don't restrain yourself from doing Y dogmatically. Fool around, fail, try harder, you'll get a feeling for when to use one over the other
And for the love of the flying spaghetti monster: Please star only messages from people with more wits than me
@kush Which just shows that Engineers should run the country ;-)
@Bracketworks so, if its return type is going to be assigned to a variable of type int, why do you need it to be inferred? It'll have to be explicitely typed anyway, right?
or are you going to throw it in a var, in which case you won't know which type the var variable is, and that sounds like it'll be a disaster
In JavaScript, it's not uncommon to see self-invoking functions:
var i = (function(x) {
return x;
})(42);
// i == 42
While I'm certainly not comparing the languages, I figured such a construct would be translatable to C#, provided a language version with support:
var i = (delegate(int x)...
my resume is awesome for a college graduate, when i was young me and a friend made a bunch of websites trying to become rich, we had our own webhosting company, i had a website marinestoday.com that was getting a few hundred thousand visitors/month
i created a whole ajax library because i didn't know about jquery lmao
you shouldn't be using try-catches to fix shitty code, you should fix the code. try-catches should only be used on external resources that you have no control over - files, network, database connections, etc..