I have a WPF DataGrid represented in XAML. I'm using a RowStyle for my grid's TableView but also need to set some properties for specific cells. I need those cells to have the properties of the row style and apply the extra properties from the cell style on top of those.
What I would need is som...
What's the practice then with regards to the actual server? Create a database for each branch and then once you merge into master you switch to the master database?
I mean the actual instance of the database. So when you test you don't mess up the server if others try to access it. So like you'll have a masterDB, devDB, someFeatureDB, etc.
Only idea that has come to mind was to either create my own arbitrary layout language, which would be too much work, or perhaps find a HTML to PDF converter.
In some ways, you're opening yourself to some pain. Why not give them some items they can customize? Logo, text, etc., and then let them upload those and you plug those into your PDF
You'll need to know where in that layout your content will be inserted, kind of a contract you have with your users... a placeholder for you to insert your content
I'm not sure if they can attach an ID to that layout element. You'd find it and insert your content into it
Yeah. I wonder if it's possible to create a PDF with some form fields and then just populate it dynamically. Would work for text. Not sure about images though.
Well, we have talked about it, and I'm well aware that the customer doesn't know what they want. :P But in this case, they really want to be able to customize it completely, not just a different header.
And you're right that they layout will be static once made. It's just the text that changes. :) Which is why I'm thinking something like a static HTML template might be a good solution.
Graphics department puts together the template in HTML and can do a bunch of previews to make sure it works correct and then I just use that, fill in all the data and then generate it.
Here's something you can try... create a simple console app project that will read the HTML template (just a simple one for now, unless you have the finished one). Then add some content to it using something like iTextSharp.
You can set an ID on an HTML element, like a DIV, where your dynamic content will be. Then read that in iTextSharp and stuff your content into it, write it to a file. Wash, rinse, repeat :)
A non-WPF question... I have a PC with 8 GB. Boss asked me how much memory I'd like to add. What's a reasonable answer? I'd like to go to 16, but 32 would be great. I'm not due for a new PC for a while, so want to squeeze more life out of this machine
Is there a dramatic improvement between 16 and 32 GB memory?
From my convo with Mav > I've needed that for quite some time. I was always right around 7g with VS x 2, Outlook, Firefox (15+ tabs), Skype, and Slack open.
since I can't exactly publish it to chrome store - you can clone the repo and switch chrome in to developer mode and "load unpacked extension" (disable the original first)
relaod the page and it'll work and you'll see full list of codemirror's supported languages - i've also updated codemirror itself to latest stable
its about getting used to FSI - i'm not used to it yet -- but Linqpad doesn't recognise F# 4.1 which is what i have installed
left a bug report - perhaps it'll get sorted quick enough
but in worst case, i'll just make a console app.. FSI will take some time and will be a distraction at this time
what I would like to know is: all tutorials are just dumping stuff in one .fs file - i need to figure out some organisational stuff - guess I'll run through your code at some point and see how you've done it - i should be up and running after that
You're welcome. From one of the answers: You can't render a partial view using only jQuery. You can, however, call a method (action) that will render the partial view for you and add it to the page using jQuery/AJAX.
He can just call @Url.Action("AddPerson", "Home") with the partial view... found a way recently to turn a regular view into partial without touching the view. Just have an overloaded action that returns a partial view result