Ok, so make a private variable Form2 _form, when you create/show Form2, you'll set it (_form = new Form2(); _form.Show()), and when you need the value you'll check if it's non-null: if(_form != null) { ... _form.SelectedComboValue ... }
Properties are like fields, they do not get called, just used.
DateTime.Today, "someText".Length, etc.
Methods, on the other hand, are called: string.Replace(), _form.Show(), etc.
When you declare methods, you will know because you will include parentheses in the declaration: public string SomeMethod() {}, private void NothingMethod(string instr) {}, etc.
@heinst The other thing you have to worry about is whether Form2 is disposed or not, because then you will get additional issues if trying to access it after it's been closed.
In that case, you'd change the SelectedComboValue altogether and set it in your comboBox1_SelectedIndexChanged event.
@heinst In that case, I strongly urge you get experience with just C# using console applications. Once you really understand C#, then start making GUI stuff.
I often feel that the best programmers aren't the ones that can make obscure solutions to difficult problems, but the ones who write something with future maintainability in mind.
but then some guy who's heard of that comes along, writes a beautifully maintainable piece of code, and you can throw it right away because it's several orders of magnitude too slow
@jcolebrand no worries buddy, Hopefully someone on SO will be able to point me in the right direction (im sure it didnt help that i tried to edit to original post and then it said it was too long/too late)
SELECT outer.[x], STUFF((SELECT ',' + DISTINCT CAST([y] AS VARCHAR(MAX)) FROM [Table] inner WHERE inner.[x] = outer.[x] FOR XML PATH('')), 1, 1, '') FROM [Table] outer WHERE <some condition> GROUP BY outer.[x]
Ultimately uses FOR XML PATH to get all matching records as a single XML value, and prepends the column value with the delimiter (in this case, a comma). Stuff takes a string and replaces from the start index a number of characters with the given string (empty string).
SELECT STUFF((SELECT ',' + DISTINCT CAST([x] AS VARCHAR(MAX)) FROM [Table] FOR XML PATH('')), 1, 1, '') will get all Table.x values and create a comma separated string.
If it's generally related to C#, or .NET, or the CLR, or MSIL, or VS, or SharpEdit, or Mono, or IIS6+, or possibly even VB.NET, it's pretty much on topic and welcome here.
If it's about a SO Q about one of those, then it's fine
note that also includes MVC3/Razor, WebForms, WebAPI, etc
If it's about javascript, and not how that javascript interfaces with C# or .NET, then it probably doesn't belong
if it's about the fakeness of the moon landing, and the room has been dead for six hours, and you're a regular, and there's nobody in here asking about a legitimate Q, then that should be ok
but if someone shows up with a legitimate Q, and the room is full of idle banter, the room should attend to that person fairly quickly, and directly, and resume banter at a later time (just be courteous)
@KendallFrey I have an element I bound to ViewModel. But the fecking element isn't updating when I update the ViewModel property. The only way I get it to update is to reference the element in the ViewModel. And do element.Dispatcher.Invoke
var ParticleWrapperCollection = new ObservableCollection<ObservableCollection<Body>>(); ParticleWrapperCollection.Add(new Body()) This updates a Body - a Body is made up of particles.
But when I do
var body = new Body() ;
ParticleWrapperCollection.Add(body)
foreach(blah)
{
body.Add(new Particle()) ;
}
It doesn't update the particle to screen... until all particles has been added to a body.. Which baffles me
@Javier You want my advice? Scrap your method for declaring the game state. Instead, use the the "diagonals" as your "levels" from the top. So the top of the pyramid is located at [0,0], next level will be [0,1] and [1,0], etc.
This is an interesting case to which I haven't been able to find any info online. I am trying to create a grid and need to bind an ObservableCollection of ObservableCollection to it. Imagine a model such as this:
public class App
{
private ObservableCollection<MyNewCollection> collect...
In computer science, a sparse array is an array in which most of the elements have the same value (known as the default value—usually 0 or null). The occurrence of zero elements in a large array is inefficient for both computation and storage. An array in which there are a large number of zero elements is referred to as being sparse.
In the case of sparse arrays, we can ask for a value from an "empty" array position. If we do this, then for array of numbers, it should return zero, and for array of objects,
it should return null.
A naive implementation of an array may allocate space f...