Yeah, seems kind of silly after I coded it. Ints are normal enough. I am trying to make a user chosen amount of dropdowns for unique records and it kind of threw me off.
I was going to work through this lab, but instead I think I'm going to have a beer and blow up some tank playing World of Tanks... I'll deal with this crap tomorrow. Later guys o/
looking for it in server explorer , google lacdb files and .net , I am usually given a connection string when told to work with a db , this is new to me, the data tab in VS looks like its all for SQL
I have never even heard of lacdb , usually isn't it mdb ?
@ScottSelby no problem. I kinda just wanted you to clarify whether you needed a connection string "to access a database on my desktop" or "to an access database on my desktop"
I spent last night and this morning nearly cursing over my code that just wouldn't work. I mean, I did take trig in high school. I should be able to use it successfully. @_@
I don't see why LINQ won't work , I saw 3 different questions on SO about it and all the responses were that there is no LINQ to Access , maybe from a third party
Access was the first DB I learned, and I remember there being minor differences when I first started writing SQL for MS SQL Server. But, that was too long ago to really remember.
@ScottSelby FYI this is what I was referring to. When I learned Access, I also learned to use all of these VBA functions in my SQL (which Access allows) and had to then learn the T-SQL Equivalents: databasejournal.com/features/msaccess/article.php/3865076/…
straight from US government, my client wanted a list of all valid EIN numbers to verify when a nonprofit tries to login , so they sent him Access DB , All that needs to be done is confirm that the EIN number the user enters is on the list - it's not worth switching to SQL 2008 which they have
You could simulate a Rubik Cube with Euler's Angles , but , since you have only six faces , and namely , six rotational axis , is prefferable to use Quaternion Notation. It's simpler , faster and equally accurate.
You would need necesarilly to use Euler's Angles if you are simulating , say , a Simetric spining top.
Some of Microsoft's early products included hidden Easter eggs. Microsoft formally stopped including Easter eggs in its programs as part of its Trustworthy Computing Initiative in 2002.
Microsoft Bear
The Microsoft Bear is a mascot of the Windows 3.1 (and later Windows 95) team. It was the teddy bear that one of the senior developers on the team used to carry around. He makes several cameo appearances in Windows:
* A drawing of him was used as the icon for the SETDEBUG.EXE and JDBGMGR.EXE system files. The odd icon gave credibility to the jdbgmgr.exe virus hoax, claiming that the f...
they should be writing code all day to stop iphones from working - hahaha
at DefCom convention a couple of years ago they were going to do a demonstration on how they hacked into gmail accounts, and one of the google employees at the convention saw that it was comming up and let Google know , and fixed it so his demonstration didn't work
Google also drove around with a camera to get all the street views appearently were keeping track of every wireless network that they came across and every MAC address they could and every IP address, no they can narrow almost anyone down to an exact location
soooooooo , I told my employer about how I used Trie to speed up autocomplete , and he wants that extremely fast ( Trie Speed ) performance to compare a text box ( EIN number) to a list of valid number, they are already in order , is adding 1.5 million entries to Trie just stupid?
He wants a little green box for valid and red for not valid , their already in order, I know Google and YouTube are searching through millions of possible entries for their autocomplete - this is deffinetly possible
well, right now I'm going to make a text box and submit button - after submit then he'll get the little green box or red box , but eventually this needs to be client side
@KendallFrey - how do I rewrite this correctly - I want 2 columns da.Fill(dt.Columns[0,1]);
well :) in the constructor of the window class I read a file, and if that file doesn't exist I don't want to show the window. So I thought that maybe I don't need to initialize it's components either. But the I want to throw an exception of we try to show the window
probably I'm the only one which will be using this code so if it crashed then I'm the fool ;)
I'm no master of the MVC pattern... But if you suppose to use it in c# would you then have a control class, a module class and then the ordinary window classes? Most of the c# programs I have seen (which I have to confess isn't that many) don't have any model or control class, but rather everything is located in the window class.
so what is the standard pattern to use in c# programming? or is it a mvc in an other way?
in my office other guys those who in my team ,they coding very fast,but i'm searching... searching... very small things every where.. lots of time wasting....
Gee, I'm having problems adjusting to (or understanding) the wpf. Especially the dataBindings and how that works... If I have a IList and want to show it in a ListBox how do I do? (I have made a DataTemplate in the ListBox)
In winForms I added things with listBox.Items.add() (if I recall correct). And there is a Items here as well, but I'm under the impression that I should do it with a dataBinding
a1: It sets whatever object the DataContext is set to as the value of the ItemsSource property. If you change the DataContext, the ItemsSource will change too.
a2: I don't know. I wouldn't be surprised if it does.
This leads into a discussion about converters, which are pretty complex.
Lets just say they let you bind a property of one type to a value of another type.
For example, binding the Text property to a Color object.
hmm I was just going to ask about if I instead of the <string> had some sort of <"struct(string,bool)">. Of course I had to add a checkbox to the template, but how would I bind the bool to the checkbox and the string to the text?