As far I know, I can call the C# method with window.external.notify() from the javascript side, but how can I receive the data sent by the C# method that is just called.
@TravisJ sorry I had to leave the office yesterday.In regards to this chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/7?m=22295376#22295376 for the C++ code being correct I know it works fine on the winform apps and also when am running the app in VS using its IIS express.
there are so many configuration options between the versions using EF that I'm not sure which I should be using
have a SQL Server Express database set up locally
do I just need something like the following... <connectionStrings> <add name="BlogContext" providerName="System.Data.SqlClient" connectionString="Server=.\SQLEXPRESS;Database=Blogging;Integrated Security=True;"/> </connectionStrings>
Hi, I am trying to use System.Timer.Timer with a polling interval of 1 sec and create a task in every minute . and another on every 2 minutes. Periodically. Is there any problems with ti than using System.Threading.Timers
Why not use a task with a simple delay? Timers are weird component-based things that are COM-based and truly awkward and unpredictable. Using a timer task is at least predictable.
What exactly do you need to get the benefit of code contracts? From what I understand, part of the system is runtime checks, but another part is code insertion during build time. Can you benefit from this without getting the special extension? Can your code still be compiled without it?
"It spent the last weeks of its life dutifully opening and closing its CD ROM drive every two minutes, reaching in vain for the restart button that it'd never touch again."
I think it was Jhawins that said they used a drink can as an alert at the fire station, so when a fax came in, the paper knocked over the can, making a noise.
"History teacher". My experience is that each country teaches "history" in a different way about different countries. It's only logical that the focus is more on their own country than other's...