in winforms application i need to place a folder in the same directory where executable resides. in code i want to refer the file in the specific folder . for that can i create a folder with same name in bin/debug/
the where condition blocks some records from the left table
it's roughly like this: Select a.int_code,a.txt_username,Sum(b.double_total_amount) as Balance from client_master a left outer join balance_sheet b on a.int_code=b.int_user_id where b.is_cleared=0 group by a.txt_username,a.int_code
what happens when you add the condition on the join like
Select a.int_code,a.txt_username,Sum(b.double_total_amount) as Balance from client_master a left outer join balance_sheet b on a.int_code=b.int_user_id and b.is_cleared=0 group by a.txt_username,a.int_code
I'm trying to wrap my head around interfaces. I keep stumbling on implimenting something like this:
public interface IFoo
{
ICollection<IBar> Bars { get; set; }
//some other properties
}
public interface IBar
{
//some properties
}
//assume Foo and Bar are implemented and extend...
completely off topic question: if I disassemble my pc's main components to take with me on holiday in my suitcase, is that something that I could have trouble getting through on airport / customs?
I think so. Someone else who wants to write to my implementations of this interface will also need to call the interface itself, which I'd rather avoid... but I don't see a way around that.
@Fuex Okay, just took a closer look at your answer. Foo cannot have public ICollection<Bar> ... because IFoo requires it to be ICollection<IBar>
I'd rather it be ICollection<Bar> - in fact that's how I had it initially to make things work, but my lead wants the interface to be able to stand completely alone.
Yep Infact if you need the interface, you can do it as you can see from my answer. you had to use ToList<IBar> becuase you can't convert it from ICollection<Bar> to ICollection<IBar>
public MainWindow()
{
InitializeComponent();
var bars = new List<Bar>() { new Bar(), new Bar() };
var foo = new Foo();
foo.AddRange<List<Bar>>(bars);
}
public class Foo : IFoo
{
public List<IBar> bars { get; private set;}
public void AddRange<T>(T ibars) where T : IEnumerable<IBar>
{
bars.AddRange(ibars);
}
public void Add<T>(T ibar) where T : IBar
{
bars.Add(ibar);
@RajkumarReddy Nancy is a lightweight, low-ceremony, framework for building HTTP based services on .Net and Mono. The goal of the framework is to stay out of the way as much as possible and provide a super-duper-happy-path to all interactions.
Nancy is designed to handle DELETE, GET, HEAD, OPTIONS, POST, PUT and PATCH requests and provides a simple, elegant, Domain Specific Language (DSL) for returning a response with just a couple of keystrokes, leaving you with more time to focus on the important bits.. your code and your application.
Isn't there anyway to determine if - upon a TextChanged event - the change is generated from the keyboard, or from something else (eg. TextBox1.text = "kajsdf")
i bind the list<T> to datagridview programatically. now i want to have specific fields of the object as columns in datagrid. rest of columns should not be shown
public bool Foo(int A, int B)
{
string c = String.Empty();
return Foo(A, B, out C);
}
public bool Foo(int A, int B, out string C)
{
if(a>b)
{
c="blah";
return true;
}
return false;
}
@JohanLarsson I'm dancing around an issue with an interface. It specifies I must have a method with two ints, and I already did the work for two ints and an out.