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I find maskedinputs quite buggy imo i think the more elegant solution would be regular expressions
A pessimist sees the difficulty in every opportunity; an optimist sees the opportunity in every difficulty I am a Optimist
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gspiteri wrote: I find maskedinputs quite buggy
Welcome to VS C#, there a Lot of bugs
i did what u Thought about it's working fine
but i guess u have some other things in between
Hope i've been helpfull
Have Fun
Never forget it
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half-life wrote: Welcome to VS C#, there a Lot of bugs
lol i hear you half-life
A pessimist sees the difficulty in every opportunity; an optimist sees the opportunity in every difficulty I am a Optimist
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Use Regex for this.You can get many example in c#, javascript just search in google.
Sarvesh Upadhyay
Senior Software Engineer
Birlasoft India Ltd.
Microsoft Certified Professional Developer in Dotnet 2.0 Enterprise Application
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HI,
I'm Trying to read from ini file like this :
<br />
string ToReturn = "";<br />
GetPrivateProfileString("CATEGORY1", "CATEGORY1_KEY1", "", ToReturn, 255, iniFilePath);<br />
but i get nothing
anyone?
THANKS
Have Fun
Never forget it
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Hi,
if ToReturn is to be an output of your method, you need to use the ref or out keyword,
both where you define and where you use the method.
I suggest you read the documentation on these keywords.
Luc Pattyn [Forum Guidelines] [My Articles]
This month's tips:
- before you ask a question here, search CodeProject, then Google;
- the quality and detail of your question reflects on the effectiveness of the help you are likely to get;
- use PRE tags to preserve formatting when showing multi-line code snippets.
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First, promise it's not for homework.
That's the very first thing I ever did with P/Invoke... but it was so long ago and I don't use it so I don't guarantee that my implementation is worth a darn:
[
System.Runtime.InteropServices.DllImportAttribute
(
"Kernel32"
,
SetLastError=true
,
EntryPoint="GetPrivateProfileString"
)
]
private unsafe static extern uint
API_GetPrivateProfileString
(
string lpAppName
,
string lpKeyName
,
string lpDefault
,
byte* lpReturnedString
,
int nSize
,
string lpFileName
) ;
public unsafe static int
GetPrivateProfileString
(
string lpAppName
,
string lpKeyName
,
string lpDefault
,
out string lpReturnedString
,
int nSize
,
string lpFileName
)
{
int result ;
byte[] temp = new byte [ nSize ] ;
fixed ( byte* ptemp = temp )
{
result = (int) API_GetPrivateProfileString
(
lpAppName
,
lpKeyName
,
lpDefault
,
ptemp
,
nSize
,
lpFileName
) ;
}
lpReturnedString = System.Text.Encoding.Unicode.GetString ( temp ).Substring ( 0 , result ) ;
return ( result ) ;
}
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Hi,
I'm need to stress test an device that has a http interface. I created a program with the web-brower object and I can access the page. I'm having a hard time figuring out how to insert data into some forms on the webpage.
Any ideas?
Thanks!
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Save yourself the time and get this[^]. You can script all of your testing and have as many simulated clients as you want beating up on your web app.
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Hi,
Sorry I do not understand your question. What do you mean http interface?
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So I've written a C# winform application that's supposed to be launched by an MFC application. All is working well until my boss asks if there's a way for me to lock the MFC application until my application was closed.
Since I just didn't see the possibility of reverse engineering the MFC app and gaining control from my app, my straight answer was "no" and that he should check to see if the MFC app he's using is able to launch my application and wait for it to close.
Now I'd like to keep my bases covered and make sure that I was correct here that I'm just way out of scope to be able to do anything with his app besides accept command line arguments.
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jchalfant wrote: All is working well until my boss asks if there's a way for me to lock the MFC application until my application was closed.
The short answer is No. You have no control of another app's message pump or it's response to it.
The long answer is maybe, with a lot of research into hooking message pumps and filtering messages. I can see a bunch of potential problems doing this though.
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Is there a way to retrieve the path of the .msi file programmatically that is currently being installed?
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maznblue wrote: Is there a way to retrieve the path of the .msi file programmatically that is currently being installed?
Why would you want to??
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I have a generic application that relies on "Plugins" (extra dll's) that drive the program. Depending on who we ship the program to I would like to ship them the generic application (in the msi) with a custom zipped file containing the appropraite dlls. The zipped file is built by the engineers from dlls that are downloaded from a site specifically for the customer they are dealing with.
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If you need the path in a deferred custom action (the ones you create in a VS deployment project), then you'll have to pass it in the CustomActionData.
The installer property for the path of the msi file is SourceDir IIRC.
So if you set the CustomActionData to [SourceDir] , then you should be able to retrieve it inside the custom action using the current Installer object's properties.
Regards,
mav
--
Black holes are the places where God divided by 0...
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Thanks, I will give that a try today. If it doesn't work I came up with a work around.
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I tried out your solution and it worked like a champ!!!!! Thanks for the help.
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I have Date..
which is user input by using " DateTimePicker " ...
But now i want to make sure this user is uder 18 year or not...
So what should do ?
-Thanks
Peter
modified on Thursday, April 3, 2008 2:48 PM
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pakpatel wrote: But now i want to chek if this user is uder 18 year or not
There is no way to tell without meeting in person, and even then it can be iffy.
Whenever a Website asks for my birthdate I use 1900-01-01 and watch what happens.
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pakpatel wrote: But now i want to chek if this user is uder 18 year or not
That is not possible with the information given.
You can check if the date entered is at least 18 years ago. Just take the current date, subtract 18 years from it, and compare the dates:
if (enteredDate <= DateTime.ToDay.AddYears(-18)) ...
Despite everything, the person most likely to be fooling you next is yourself.
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