if the selected item text is larger than that width, I want to do text wrap(multiliner) and increase the height of combobox so that all text of selected item is visible to read
1. Figure out if your string is really longer than the the width of the control (MeasureString) 2. If it is, split the string and insert some \n to make it multi-line. 3. You might need to increase the height of the control as a result? 4. Profit.
MeasureString will give you a SizeF instance, and it will contain the height of your text. You can use that together with the number of lines of text that you have (you can tell by counting by many \n you inserted), and viola.
This must be what color blind people feel like when someone first tries to explain how they see things differently.
Does type safe code have a special meaning in .NET assigned by Microsoft that the rest of the world doesn't want to accept? forums.asp.net/t/1366671.aspx/1
In computer science, type safety is the extent to which a programming language discourages or prevents type errors. A type error is erroneous or undesirable program behaviour caused by a discrepancy between differing data types for the program's constants, variables, and methods (functions), e.g., treating an integer (int) as a floating-point number (float). Type safety is sometimes alternatively considered to be a property of a computer program rather than the language in which that program is written; that is, some languages have type-safe facilities that can be circumvented by progra...
The most common definition is strong typing.
The memory safety that MS is talking about is almost completely unrelated, and is a far less common definition of the term.
Memory safety is a concern in software development that aims to avoid software bugs that cause security vulnerabilities dealing with random-access memory (RAM) access, such as buffer overflows and dangling pointers.
Computer languages such as C and C++ that support arbitrary pointer arithmetic, casting, and deallocation are typically not memory safe. There are several different approaches to find errors in such languages: see the Detection section below.
The Cyclone language uses a hybrid approach, including "fat pointers" (pointers that carry their metadata directly) and regions to giv...
in .Net 4.0 this works OpenBaseKey but in 3.5 It's does not work RegistryKey localMachineRegistry = RegistryKey.OpenBaseKey(RegistryHive.LocalMachine, Environment.Is64BitOperatingSystem ? RegistryView.Registry64 : RegistryView.Registry32);
the only problem would be if there are strange compatibility requirements, like if it's a web app that's going to be deployed on a server where the IT staff is stupidly paranoid and they don't allow .NET 4.0
I've had some $$$ invested there for a couple/few years... It's done decent, maybe around 7-8%. Overall it's not bad, but tying it up for 3-5 years is a bit iffy so I don't put much in
pretty low, when I enrolled there was a $500 minimum (if I recall) to use some of the tools, but otherwise I think you could start for just a few bucks
I've had way better returns with Vanguard index funds though, I'm looking at rolling my Roth IRA over there to get away from some higher fee/ratio American Funds
it might not be the best idea but I wouldn't call it a stupid mistake. At least you're building a balance, it's better to have some money in a 401k with the ability to roll it over down the road than to wait until you need a lot in there and can't put it in fast enough
Some day, there will be a Bitcoin ASIC somewhere in a museum, with a card reading, "Before the Digital Counterfeiting Act was passed in 2024, machines such as these were used to mass-produce digital currencies such as Bitcoins."
How would you experts parallelize the traversal of a tree in which every node can have up to 3 children of unknown length? With threads, tasks or parallel.for or something else? (The goal is to search one particular node, and the tree has no order.)
"this is quite powerful because it allows you use your interface as a base type in your system for loser coupled code" Everyone knows that, but whats a purpose of special interface method :S
If the DLL is 64 bit:
Copy the DLL to C:\Windows\SysWoW64\
In elevated cmd: %windir%\SysWoW64\regsvr32.exe %windir%\SysWoW64\namedll.dll
if the DLL is 32 bit:
Copy the DLL to C:\Windows\System32\
In elevated cmd: %windir%\System32\regsvr32.exe %windir%\System32\namedll.dll
@brano88 can't you inherit the parents method if you don't want to implement your own, or are you required to implement its own method in both abstract and interface?