hi,i have a dhtmlx form with textboxes and dropdowns with"Search"button.user enter the fields and click on the search button,search the specific records from database and display the records.Entering all fields are not mandatory but if user has not entered atleast one value,we have to give validation message in the form that please enter atleast one value,how to give that validation message?
I am doing ASP.NET Forms now. It feels like I have do find all kinds of hidden properties to make it do its magic in the background in a way I want it to. Not really enjoying it.
I'd rather have an abstraction of C# in the browser. Then you have proper tooling and language constructs, whereas you'd have the same power (such as Script# project). JS by itself is just.. not great.
JS is the only choice to do something in the browser, and if you want to achieve high responsiveness of your site, you must use it. It doesn't make JS great, it makes it a necessity.
One shouldn't kill the other. Look at ASP.NET. Great tooling, a lot of love for the developer -- and you can create a great user experience. The issue is that there is no alternative/competition for in-browser programming.
Then again knowing more then 1 type of programming language will make you a better programmer Too bad that a lot of C# developers want to stick so desperately with one language
@KendallFrey Not sure if it was your or Kyle that used WebAPI controllers with Razor to generate HTML/JSON depending on calling context. Was it you? If so, how did you implement it?
hi,i have a dhtmlx form with textboxes and dropdowns with"Search"button.user enter the fields and click on the search button,search the specific records from database and display the records.Entering all fields are not mandatory but if user has not entered atleast one value,we have to give validation message in the form that please enter atleast one value,how to give that validation message?
@LewsTherin no, I honestly don't understand what it gets me. I started with camel case, and I'm not sophisticated enough to grok the difference between a local and declared.
Or rather, why I'd need a capitalized letter to point that out for me.
@HansZ I guess I see, I'm just not sure why you'd name your variables in a way to allow for that confusion. I should be using Pascal, it's the standard here... but I never seem to remember when it's time to declare a new variable.
if (condition)
# this line is indented with whitespace
# every line indented with whitespace is in the if block
#this is no longer indented, out of if block
recursion's not that hard. simplest case, you take a big problem, break off a piece to make it a smaller problem, and then use yourself to solve that smaller problem