Is there not a way to set the default culture once in a program, and just "leave it be"? Just realised my DateTime.Now returns 07:14:00 when it's suppose to return 10:14:00, and doing this when the app starts doesnt seem to help:
I have more that 50 reports in my project hence i cannot opt to pass currency symbol to each and every report individually hence i am exploring an alternative to it, i have already set culture symbol to what i need but i am unable to set my crystal reports to accept that symbol.
for your better understanding i have a field in my db that accepts currency symbol and i have set current culture currency symbol to that value but i am unaware of how to set all my crystal reports to accept that value as my default currency symbol, also i would like to request a detailed step by step solu…
@user3555836 We're using CR with a framework in between too, and for us it's just "This is the name of the var inside the report" and "this is the name of the var in this class", both as string, variable gets shoved into reprot variable.
@user3555836 I don't know what your framework an architecture looks like. We just pass two strings to our framework: names of report vars, names of c# vars to shove into the respective report vars.
@Squirrelkiller that is exactly what i want to find an alternative solution... dont want to go and pass the value to all the reports individually! i googled and found out that if if set a field as currency then symbol is taken from the culture, so i changed the symbol in culture, but the same is not being reflected in cr.
I have a simulation model built in cpp. The whole code base follows little structure and since taken over the code base I've had a nightmare with it. So i'm planning on refactoring the code to abide by some OO structure which will hopefully make it easier for future programmers to pick up. I'm having a bit of dificulty trying to abstract the system into components.
More namely, I'm confused on how I should encapsulate functionality which is related to simulation settings and encapsulate functionality which is specific to the simulation itself
I'm not sure if this is worth posting a question: is there a quick and easy way for figuring out (during debug) when an item is added to a list? I'm looking at a "collection modified during foreach" exception but I don't see any code that changes the list. I tried to add the list to the watch window but it goes out of scope in underlying methods (even though some code is still adding an item to it anyway). I'm struggling with Google due to many topics existing with the same keywords.
@IvinRaj This is an interview question. You don't know how to make a HTTP request and materialize some JSON? Well, did you consider you're not qualified for the job?
@Sam: on what? The list is a nav prop of an EF entity. I'm debugging a unit test. I see no place to put a relevant breakpoint, I can't break on a property without an explicit setter, no?
@Sam The Watch window is all I know for debugging :) If this question is bigger than I initially thought it was (which I get the feeling it is...) I'll post a proper question then.
@Sam: My issue is in finding the hook to do so. I could rewrite myFoo.ThisList to a wrapped property where I can set breakpoints on the get/set, but that still wouldn't cover cases where someone else stores a reference to the same list and uses that to add an item to it.
@Wietlol: I have a list of items (3). I iterate over the list of items and do some processing. At no point should the original list be appended to (it's not allowed). Yet, after the first iteration, there are somehow 4 items in the list now. Someone is adding to this list. When I use the debug watch, I add ThisList to the watch.
@Wietlol: However, this isn't helping me, since (1) ThisList does not exist in underlying processing methods, so the watch doesn't update and (2) this only observes ThisList, and not any other variable which might also contain a reference to that same list object.
@Wietlol: Clarification: when I said At no point should the original list be appended to (it's not allowed) I didn't mean that I want an immutable list. The list can be appendedto in other situations, just not this particular situation. I'm only trying to find out which line of code is adding something to that list, I'm not trying to ensure the lists's immutability.
@Wietlol There is no setter to override (the list is an ICollection nav prop of an EF entity). While creating a new list with the same items will prevent adding to the list, that doesn't help me with figuring out where the unwanted addition is happening.
@Wietlol More likely than not, the 4th item is being added to the wrong list. Which means that I don't just need to block the addition to the wrong list, I also need to fix it so it gets added to the right list.
@Flater if the list is managed by EF, then your database has a new record
probably
or you have unsaved local changes
in the second case, find the getter usages of the collection and see if any of them leak the collection reference or if they add an item to it
i usually prevent such things at the entity class level, but such encapsulation often requires a lot of refactoring if you didnt make it so from the beginning
@Wietlol: It's a unit test, so there is no database being used. Secondly, EF can't just update an already enumerated list out of nowhere, without me asking it to do so. It's effectively foreach(var listItem in myObj.ThisList) { DoSomething(liteItem); } yet somehow the myObj.ThisListis being modified even though the DoSomething() method does not get a direct reference to the list. I'm trying to figure out how DoSomething() is accessing the list anyway.
@Wietlol: Just to be clear, I'm not asking you how the list is being accessed, I'm asking how I can have a debug watch to an object rather than a variable
@Wietlol: "More likely than not, the 4th item is being added to the wrong list. Which means that I don't just need to block the addition to the wrong list, I also need to fix it so it gets added to the right list."
<rant>
Just imagine, you know how to programm - somewhat - and you are forced to use a Programm to parse an XML wich is desined for non-programmers.
This means it's not programming but "configuring" stuff. It's a very weird an inefficient combination of Mouse and Keyboard that you have to use, leading to allot of frustration.
Aswell you have to click 3 times before something is saved and it doesn't even warn you if some work get's lost.
Welp anyway you are working with that programm for like 2 hours with no major result.