well... to be honest.. i've only had to delve into php a few times, but every time it strikes me as a cryptic sort of scripting language, that requires some experience to properly decipher. Meanwhile C# has an awesome IDE that uses intellisense and integrated help... jus' sayin' is all
I don't care so much which is faster to learn , i care more which in the end is more often better faster method, and probably more valuable to learn considering I am now interviewing for several junior level developer jobs
ohhhhh, its not public api , I have a key , soo.. looks like don't put the key in client script im assuming?
Hello guys! I am developing a C# application around Lua and have noticed that latin characters (such as á, é, í, ó, ú and so forth) appear to be switched to other encodings when i retrieve them fro Lua, is there anything i can do to counter this behaviour?
I made windows form application in win7 .net3.5, all the custom textboxes were give hardcoded locations everything went well in all xp systems, & even in win7 systems which had .net 3.5 but for windows 7 system with .net 4.0 all the custom boxes are slightly to the above and left of their lab...
USE [HistoricalData]
GO
Create Proc SProcList
AS
/*
Date: 19-05-2012
Purpose: Obtains a list of all stored procedures
inc parameters and their data types.
*/
BEGIN
SELECT
sprocs.ROUTINE_NAME,
parms.PARAMETER_NAME,
parms.DATA_TYPE
FROM
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.ROUTINES sprocs
LEFT OUTER JOIN INFORMATION_SCHEMA.PARAMETERS parms ON parms.SPECIFIC_NAME = sprocs.ROUTINE_NAME
WHERE
sprocs.ROUTINE_TYPE = 'PROCEDURE'
END
and this is the code of the method called in datasource
Public Function GetListVilles() As IList(Of String) Dim lstVilles As New List(Of String)() Using connection As DbConnection = Me.GetConnection() Using command As DbCommand = connection.CreateCommand() command.CommandText = "select distinct villeEFP from EFP" connection.Open() Using reader As DbDataReader = command.ExecuteReader() lstVilles.Add(Convert.ToString(reader("villeEFP"))) End Using End Using End Using Return lstVilles End Function
@HansRudel Then the database must be called something other then HistoricalData because everything else is correct. I cut and pasted the proc into one of my play databases and it ran fine
Msg 102, Level 15, State 1, Line 1 Incorrect syntax near 'go'. Msg 111, Level 15, State 1, Line 1 'CREATE/ALTER PROCEDURE' must be the first statement in a query batch.
Yeah, dynamic is like rabbits: you put one and it procreates until the entire vicinity is covered by them. At which point, the vicinity collapses. Game over.
one more random question which i was wondering about earlier. Say i have a block of code for a browse button and im effectively calling it twice. Is it better to put it into its own class in a class lib and create an instance of it each time these two buttons are clicked or should i leave it as 2 separate methods even though they are the same?
i have a feeling that there is a performance hit for creating a class each time?
so i should have it set as i do now. 1 class and two methods which create an instance of that class and pass in a variable to the formal parameter "propertyName"
@SPFiredrake So I got my thing working perfectly but my "boss" didnt like my code so he told me to create two methods one that GetDisplayNameFromPath and the other that GetPathFromDisplayName and populate the combobox that way
i have been staring at my screen for 1 and a half hours now
private string ResultsFilePath = string.Empty;
public string QueryResultFilePath
{
get
{
return ResultsFilePath;
}
set
{
ResultsFilePath = value;
txtQueryResultsFilePath.Text = value;
UpdateLog("The results file has been specified: " + value);
}
}
thats where its initially set i guess
so its blank to begin with. then each time the user clicks the button and selects a new file, that method in the class lib returns a string and that string is assigned to QueryResultFilePath
does that make sense
do u want me to write out a full/short example of how i have it atm?