I've got a couple of columns in a datagrid which I'm trying to bind to a property in the window's datacontext which will hide/show the columns when a checbox is toggled.
However, I'm getting a bunch of System.Windows.Data Error: 2 : Cannot find governing FrameworkElement or FrameworkContentElement for target element. [...] target property is 'Visibility' (type 'Visibility') errors and the binding isn't resolving properly but I can't work out for the life of me why
Similar issue on trying to set the ItemsSource of some ComboBox columns too which is also not working
Does it involve creating an ObjectDataProvider in your view's Resources, binding to the relevant data, and then binding your columns to it via ElementName= binding?
Basically the columns don't end up part of the visual tree so they can't bind to the datacontext of the containing elements (and as a result can't use ElementName either) but what you can do is using the Source={x:Reference Dummy} as the binding source, bind to another element (in this case a dummy FrameworkElement) which will inherit it's context from the window, and address the path as DataContext.<proprtyname>
Firefox is being weird. Double-clicking the header will maximize/restore properly, but the maximize/restore/minimize buttons aren't responding. In-tab navigation is working fine with mouse and keyboard, but the Tabs themselves aren't responding.
@CopperKettle It's probably because you're pushing "1" onto the stack (a string) in the first example, but in the second it's 1, an int, and when you pop the value you're casting to a string, which can't be done from an int
Hmm. Let's say you have a method that parses a string formatted like /type/value/subtype/subvalue/thirdtype/thirdvalue, like /org/myOrg/departments/MyDept/teams/myTeam. I parse this and if I find a bad format (say, an odd number of segments) I throw a FormatException.
But what would you throw if the tree is badly structured, say, something like /org/myOrg/teams/myTeam, when a team can't be directly under an org?
@mr5 Hmm. It's not an InvalidOperationException because there's no operation performed - it's just a badly formatted identifier. Except the format is structurally correct but semantically incorrect.
What types of exceptions should be thrown for invalid or unexpected parameters in .NET? When would I choose one instead of another?
Follow-up:
Which exception would you use if you have a function expecting an integer corresponding to a month and you passed in '42'? Would this fall into the "ou...
You can add something to the connection string for MSSQL to get it to use integrated security, but if that even does it, it will probably only work with Windows auth
In other news, I've just been testing a new interface for an old table, and it turns out that I have to account for no less than 7 DIFFERENT DATE FORMATS in a single column
Well, the part this will be replacing anyway. The original part which did what this will be was written by someone who left quite a while back (like 2 years) and we never really touched it
basically you can start a method that has an async delay and then writes something to console, then your statement continues (e.g. show another line), and then the asynchronously sent line get swritten.
I've a method which produces random huge integer numbers (from 0 to int.MaxValue) but I only want from 0 to 1 or from -1 to 1. At the moment I'm just doing number / (float)int.MaxValue, but I noticed that it's very slow. Is there any other way to do that? Like, a clever bitwise operation, or something like that? I don't mind if the results become different, anyway they are pseudorandom :).
Given a coordinates (x, y, z, w) I want to get a float value. I am not using the hash to make a hash table nor anything similar. I just found that a hash can be used to get "random" numbers from coordinates
was curious if anyone knows this issue, but I was using File.copy to send my package.json to an output directory, and it doesnt seem to "recognize" that the output directory exists, even though it does