Since i dont know how to deal with LockBits i decided to use it just to get the image into a simplified Array :P Cause i know how to deal with array xD and i still fail by just creating it grrrrrrrrrrrr
its only a 400x400 image and i only store 1 color channel in the array sooo small
and even if, it breaks into the 27th Y line only...
ok thanks anyway... getting crazy... some cool guys begin to help me, they give me some approach and after trying and trying, i fail cause i dont know how to deal with that too... and they are not here anymore xD
maybe i should ask them a complete code Ready to COPY/PASTE instead of trying by myself with their help. xD at least one question, one answer and done
nah man, been two days i am on those 20 lines grrrr
@NETscape - It seems unlikely that you would be able to get as much value out of an existing instance as a new one without having implemented an anti pattern.
Seemed like a lot of setup though, and since I don't think it is backwards compatible with my version of mvc (4) I don't think I would be able to make that much of a jump all at once without a lot of time invested.
@NETscape - Yeah but why would myObj ever be null in the first place? Is it an internal property? If it is a property of a class then shouldn't there be more logic than the null coalesce, or shouldn't it be contained in a method for that class? If it is in a normal method as a parameter, why not instantiate it when you define it? Or if it is optional, why not make it optional in the signature?
MyObj() is a COM object. the line of code is in a static Scan() function.
oh i value your opinion for sure. since its a COM object, i'm hoping nothing else disposes the object unexpectedly. in the case it does, then it just reinits
@ohmusama I actually wrote an email to John Saunders about some of the misgivings of Internet Explorer a few months before they announced the new browser project :)
@TravisJ Imagine the support matrix for that. IE11 had 11, 10, 8, 7, and 5 docmodes IE 10 had 10, 9, 8, 7 and 5, IE 9 had 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, IE 8 had 8, 7, 6, 5 (and maybe 4).
if you had a bug in one engine, you probably had it in all the engines
There are 2 massive exploits in the IE browser that were introduced early on which make it too vulnerable in my opinion. First, it has the available hooks to update the operating system. Second, when it fails it falls back to the system runtime.
Removing the parts which deal with those 2 aspects will greatly increase the security of the browser, and that is the main concern of users in my opinion.
WPFO is a Fox-affiliated television station whose signal covers southern Maine and northern New Hampshire; it is licensed to Waterville, Maine. It broadcasts a high definition digital signal on UHF channel 23 from a transmitter on Oak Hill in Litchfield near the Androscoggin-Kennebec county line. Owned by Corporate Media Consultants Group (itself 51% owned by Power Television International and 49% owned by Max Media), the station is operated by Sinclair Broadcast Group, owner of WGME-TV. WPFO's studios are co-located with WGME at Northport Business Park in Portland, Maine. Syndicated programming...
Windows Presentation Foundation (or WPF) is a graphical subsystem for rendering user interfaces in Windows-based applications by Microsoft. WPF, previously known as "Avalon", was initially released as part of .NET Framework 3.0. Rather than relying on the older GDI subsystem, WPF uses DirectX. WPF attempts to provide a consistent programming model for building applications and separates the user interface from business logic. It resembles similar XML-oriented object models, such as those implemented in XUL and SVG.
WPF employs XAML, an XML-based language, to define and link various interface elements...
My application uses one context instance which exists for the life of the application. I am using Entity Framework to read and write all data to the database. After I add objects, I want them to be cleaned by the garbage collector so they don't persist in memory. I've tried:
While context...
well, I do .AddOrUpdate() directly on the DbContext, then call .SaveChanges(), then I want to execute the sproc that does a bunch of UPDATE statements internally in the DB
@Pheonixblade9 - That seems like you are missing an opportunity to update stuff prior to insertion. Does the update affect rows not part of the addorupdate set?
would anyone be able to rewrite completly a function i have written using GetPixel() and SetPixel() by LockBits() logic? yes asking again for new peoples :P its around 20 lines to rewrite only.. and i am not able to deal with LockBits and pointers
think of it this way - I am inserting two week's worth of data into a table which contains years of data, then I need to update the entire dataset based on the union dataset
@Pheonixblade9 - For every entity you just inserted or updated
foreach(var entity in InsertOrUpdate)
{
dbContext.Entry(entity).State = EntityState.Detached;
}
@Pheonixblade9 - To avoid an automatic transaction rollback in the event of something weird? Basically because something unexpected could happen, that would probably be a good question for main to be honest.