but... then comes the question if I instead had two string properties? would it just take the first one first and then the second one?
or ahaa should I create a DataSet instead of the struct and name two fields to list text and boolValue and use something like {Binding text} and {Binding boolValue}?
of course, now comes the question, If i have a checkbox (as I was talking about) and I don't have the ObservableCollection<T>, then do I get the updates in the List when I check the box?
@Markus ObservableCollection only looks at add/remove I believe. BindingList/BindingSource actually listens to property changes (assuming object implements INotifyPropertyChanged)
but it was done in an hour and I would have time to do about 8 different version on the thing before I have managed to make one in wpf :) but that maybe says more about me then it does about c#
side question: when getting an answer on stacktrace we mark it as an accepted answer (if it is) an maybe give some up on the answer. is there anything similar on the chat, there is the star, but it's hard to specify one row as a good answer...
noo, my Binding doesn't work :( if I have understood it correct it should work though...
I have made a class myClass with two properties myBool and byString, and filled a List<myClass> and in the template I have Text="{Binding myString}" and IsChecked="{Binding myBool}"
It seem a little strange not to have it checked at compile time, I mean even programmatically change them you could have them checked at compile time (at least type checked or something)
I need a little help... I tested my app and it worked fine. I made a change tried to run it and got an exception. Removed the change and am still getting the excpetion "Could not load file or assembly 'EntityFramework, Version=4.3.1.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089' or one of its dependencies. The located assembly's manifest definition does not match the assembly reference. (Exception from HRESULT: 0x80131040)"
I added the EntityFramework reference to the webUI project from the domain project and now it's working. Don't know why it worked the first time without it
I'm thinking about the System.IO.Path.Combine() function which has several overloads (string[]; string1, string2; string1, string2, string3... and so on)
"Radio buttons were named after the physical buttons used on older car radios to select preset stations – when one of the buttons was pressed, other buttons would pop out, leaving the pressed button the only button in the "pushed in" position." TIL
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using System.Web;
using SportsStore.Domain.Entities;
namespace SportsStore.WebUI.Models
{
public class ProductsListViewModel
{
IEnumerable<Product> Products { get; set; }
public PageInfo PagingInfo { get; set; }
}
}
public class NinjectControllerFactory : DefaultControllerFactory
{
private IKernel ninjectKernel;
public NinjectControllerFactory()
{
ninjectKernel = new StandardKernel();
AddBindings();
}}
@TonyHarmon ok wait a second, you got that class in your project, and you don't even know what's a constructor? that looks like dependency injection rofl
If you want to pass information into a view (without resorting to cookies or secondary ajax requests or whatever) that can be utilized by javascript, either you encode it into the html somehow (maybe as part of the html or a hidden input) or you have to encode your thing as JSON and render/assign it to a variable in a script block.
If you need to get items from the view, well, there's even more options, and I don't think I could even describe those generically
and of course my list isn't even exhaustive, as, of course, you could dynamically generate whole script blocks of functions/invocations/whatever...