@ohmusama I know :'( The worst part is this code actually is in an ASPX APPLICATION. Winforms in aspx no joke. Works fine with other stuff somehow... its some weird render that converts it or something.
@BradleyDotNET Sigh..that wasn't what I asked for though. You don't know the document I'm referring to and it seems no one else here does so I'll keep looking or find an alternative :)
wait, you're running Winforms in ASPX....? i'm assuming the application is trying to change the size of the browser window when it is redrawn... or something to that effect, no?
When I run the project (F5) I receive the following exception in IDE:
An unhandled exception of type 'System.AccessViolationException' occurred in System.Windows.Forms.dll
Additional information: Attempted to read or write protected memory. This is often an indication that other memory is corrup...
@scheien - So your dsl is slow? Has it been hot or cold lately? Sometimes what will happen is the lines out there are so far from the service that they start to lose signal when the lines are too hot or too cold. Your best bet is to just wait it out, and it will work better during the next season.
@JABFreeware As far as I remember, that AccessViolation was an intermittent issue, F5 would solve it in some cases. Obviously not a permanent solution, but if you're having trouble updating .NET, it might be nice to try as a workaround.
@scheien how about someone who doesn't know how to restart their computer? I explained and explained it to them. Finally I just had them unplug it. It was win 7 so no errors that time...lucky
ok so you have class item with props, ideally you do not use an anonymous object and you use a strong type
List<StrongType> projection = listOfItems.Select(item => new StrongType(){
Max = item.Max,
Date = item.Date
}).ToList();
Ideally you have a property on your content which is public string Searchable { get { return this.Name + this.KeyedBy + etc }; } and then you just do content.Where(obj => obj.Searchable.Contains(search)
either the number of elements is known at compile time, in which case each of those values is probably better off as a named field, or the set of values is unknown until runtime, in which case List