Jan
Sep 5, 2012 04:26
bye
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 04:26
byw
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 04:26
no worries
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 04:13
yeah, I might have to look at that
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 04:13
haha
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 04:06
hm, I am looking for something that is fast and unlimited
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 04:05
This country is not exactly known for "high tech"
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 04:03
wouldn't surprise me
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 04:02
fair enough. But after all it is not my problem. They expect me to pay top dollar and I expect a decent service. And as long as they don't deliver, I won't pay
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 03:59
Then it is wrong what they have told me. From time to time I get constant (that is for a longer period of time) rates of 1.5MByte/s
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 03:56
The problem is, that the people who answers phones for Company A are total morons and either really stupid or vicious
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 03:55
If I had that all the time I'd be happy. But when I am home at night (around 8) I cannot browse at all
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 03:54
It is. The max speed I get on the ADSL2+ is around 12M at night
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 03:51
I have an active phone line (as I need to have it for the internet connection) but I do not have a phone
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 03:51
According to my ISP the DSLAM is 3.6KM away. And my ISP is only a reseller of the line so they won't do shit
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 03:50
I don't have anything connected to the line except for a brand new router (and I tested a different one as well)
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 03:42
I am at work at the moment and cant look it up
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 03:41
my what? no... haha
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 03:40
yes
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 03:40
The speed drops below 50KB/s during "rush hour".
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 03:39
Second: strings are immutable. That means that every "+" operation creates a new string in memory. You should rather use a stringbuilder or string.Format. That increases the performance. Also, you can use "\r\n" for a linebreak
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 03:37
haha, where? I am having serious issues with mine at the moment
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 03:35
fine
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 03:35
that's alright. Naming conventions are a delicate thing. As long as they are consistent in your project it should be finde
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 03:34
oh, okay. The "cb" prefix made it seem as it was a checkbox
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 03:32
2 things: why do you save all of that into a checkbox's Text?
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 03:29
yes. And it is also a learning project for me. A chance to apply concepts that I haven't been using before
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 03:27
that includes embracing the concepts of the language and of OOP, use design patterns, etc
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 03:26
as I said: the goal is not to make it work but to make it work properly
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 03:26
I divided the whole thing into different modules and started with the TV shows. the recognition engine is almost complete. but it takes a lot of work
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 03:23
a batch renamer for "regular" files that is pattern based. but it also recognizes individual TV shows and retrieves names from an online database, organizes them into folders, provides a calender that displays air dates, etc. The music will be also recognized and the details looked up in a different online database
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 03:21
And I keep adding stuff to my to do list
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 03:20
I know that feeling. I just recently started a project where I create a renaming software for TV shows and music
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 03:19
haha, yes, I do. But it is even more satisfying if you have written code that not only works, but works elegantly :)
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 03:18
alternatively you can use public void setMyCheckBoxText(string text){ this.myCheckBox.Text = text; } to change the Text property of the checkbox
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 03:16
yes
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 03:13
the checkbox its is private. but this method is public. In that way your checkbox cannot be accessed from other classes (as it should be) and you only publicly expose exactly the required data
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 03:11
public string getMyCheckboxText(){ return this.myCheckBox.Text; }
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 03:11
The easiest way is to create public getter methods
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 03:10
glad to hear. Now, I made the remark in my answer that exposing your controls by setting them to public is not the way to go
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 03:08
sry, was out for lunch. did my code help?
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 02:21
But the transition is easy
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 02:21
It is. I started with Java myself, but I haven't touched it once after I started to use C#
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 02:17
I had an 3 day introductory class to C# a while back and learned the rest by myself. In that class they introduced delegates. But I never fully understood when I should use them until I was writing a program where I really needed this concept.
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 02:17
Hm, I don't know. The only thing that really helps you is your own drive. You can learn basic concepts in a classroom. But you really only learn new and complex concepts when you desperately need them for a program that you build. At least from my experience.
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 02:11
understanding what's going on is always a good thing. Just copying code from a website is a very error prone way of coding :)
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 02:10
Whenever I call a method or constructor and I have to pass more than 2 or 3 parameters I check if it isn't easier to introduce a new type(=class) that acts as a data container for my parameters
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 02:08
This is a prime example of OOP and its benefits: Instead of passing multiple string values, pass an object that contains them all. And if no such object exists, just create one
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 01:52
No worries
Jan
Sep 5, 2012 01:50
But I have posted an answer. See if that helps. Any questions you might have you can post here. I might be out for lunch soon, but I'll leave the window open