I am new to SO, and I have asked about 5 questions so far. I have uploaded images of my code on most of my questions. On two separate occasions two different users advised me not to upload images of code and outputs. One even jokingly said that every time an image of code is uploaded a kitten som...
@JasonBrown in that example, nothing; it is same as public variable. But because it is function, normally there is extra logic...making sure it's a proper value.
Or calling delegates, etc. Is same as having functions getTheVar() and setTheVar(new value)
It doesn't have to be the same..and is silly (bad use?) when it is. I'm unfamiliar with that control, sorry.
Key word "in that example" ..idk that class; perhaps it implements more logic when setting the values. Or calls delegates/raises events, would be my guess.
And because that's good practice? Black box behavior is one of the pillars of OOP.
Hard to know what to display? ..just call tostring on each object and display that? ...questions the class designers had to answer / implement. Sorry I vsnt be of help.
So, after working a bit with the HTML-to-PDF conversion and realising we already have a web service to handle it, we are now performing WebRequests to it. The WebRequest succeeds, and all the variables contain what they need to contain (checked multiple times), however, yet I get that the PDF is damaged and can't be repaired when trying to create it like this - Any ideas?
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What we want to do, is call a WebService with the required parameters and get the stream of a PDF back. Later on we will display it using another service but for now i would want to write it to a local PDF @Nerdintraining
That is correct. @satibel
Nothing else here
Which, I guess, could explain a bit of this and a bit of that
The original code isn't mine. It's just a kind of global class we use for whenever we need to call the service. So you'd need to ask that of my co-worker.
So I can clearly see the WebService is returning something via fiddler
Body is '15' and Content-type is application/pdf. So I guess it corresponds quite well with what we saw in the code.
Yeah. It seems like WebResponse.GetResponseStream() isn't doing what it should. Or its doing exactly what it should but we fuck it somewhere. @Nerdintraining
var file = @"E:\Testconversion\pdf1.pdf";
var stream = File.Open(file, FileMode.Open, FileAccess.Read, FileShare.Read);
BinaryReader reader = new BinaryReader(stream);
var what = reader.ReadBytes((int) stream.Length);
foreach (var b in what)
Console.WriteLine(b);
actualy how about this for debugging: Get some random pdf (that works). Maybe download something. Now set up your own IIS and have it give you hat pdf. Than use that (probably localhost) to test your code.
Thing is, after giving the webservice URL to the WebRequest, we just pass in the Filetype, XML Data, and the path to a .xslt file, then expect a stream back that we effectively can display a PDF with. As of right now, we only have a very much empty PDF, as far as local-PDF's go @Nerdintraining
I think my safest bet would be to clash together with my co-worker again, like yesterday, and figure it out once and for all since we'll have access to the server itself then as well
Like I said a bit earlier, I think i'll have to talk with a few co-workers, yeah. Know too little context to be able to do much else otherwise @satibel
Well he's sitting about 3-4 meters from me, would be easier to just punch a hole in the sound-dampening panel between us and stare at him intensively @satibel
@Xariez real solution : "hi [name], [something positive about them (i.e. I like that tie you have today)]. I've got a favor to ask you, could you check why my request is only giving me a pdf header with no content?"