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In my experience most employers are looking for the degree, but in my opinion knowledge, ability & experience mean the most. Yes my employer helped me get my MCAD & MCSD (.Net for both) certifications but when they hired me there were more interested in:
1) Knowledge/Experience
2) Education (they wanted a BS Degree)
Certifications never entered into the conversation. Like I said, this is just my experience & opinions.
"It's only that urgent if you have to pee."
Dave Kreskowiak
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Psycho-*Coder*-Extreme wrote:my experience most employers are looking for the degree
Seems like it. It probably depends on the area labor pool.
"The clue train passed his station without stopping." - John Simmons / outlaw programmer
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how do you hide unsupported method from a base class ? so that they don't show up in intellisense.
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Make them private.
- S
50 cups of coffee and you know it's on!
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Hmmm, after further research, I don't think you can.
I thought this would do it:
public class ClassA
{
public void DoStuff( )
{
}
}
public class ClassB : ClassA
{
private new void DoStuff( )
{
}
}
But the ClassA's DoStuff is still accessible.
I tried this too:
public class ClassA
{
public void DoStuff( )
{
}
}
public class ClassB : ClassA
{
[Obsolete]
public new void DoStuff( )
{
}
}
But that just tells you that the method is depricated in intellisense.
- S
50 cups of coffee and you know it's on!
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Steve Echols wrote: just tells you that the method is depricated in intellisense
You could just put it there to kind of shoo people away from it. Get them thinking "I better not use this method, it might not be there in the next release of the class"
"I've seen more information on a frickin' sticky note!" - Dave Kreskowiak
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The question isn't clear. Does he want the method hidden to the subclass or to the outside world?
Of course, he can opt to implement the method anyway and have it throw a NotSupportedException.
Cheers,
Vıkram.
After all is said and done, much is said and little is done.
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Vikram A Punathambekar wrote: implement the method anyway and have it throw a NotSupportedException
I never thought of that. Could be done.
"The clue train passed his station without stopping." - John Simmons / outlaw programmer
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You can't hide the method from the base class.
Actually this is because of OO design principles: the derived class can only extend the interface not narrow it.
Maybe you should work with two different interfaces - one for your base class and one for your derived class.
btw: yes I know that in the .NET framework there are subclasses that do not fulfill the interface of the base class (some UI controls have this behaviour, but I can't remember which ones at the moment).
-^-^-^-^-^-
no risk no funk
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Hi,
I have a problem how to bind my data in database so it can show on my crystal report..Please help me i'm new in crystal report
im using Sql Server 2005 and VS 2005
Thanks and Regards,
TCim
-- modified at 22:31 Monday 23rd July, 2007
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What kind of problem are you having? Just saying you have a problem doesn't really help anyone help you
"The clue train passed his station without stopping." - John Simmons / outlaw programmer
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I'm sorry for duplicate post in multiple forums, can anyone tell me if my question is related to multiple subject which hold by different forums, how can I get all related member can read it?
For a camera which support DirectShow, I can easily get it used via DirectShow, preview video, capture image, record, and so on. Now my problem is I want to know which usb controller and port the camera I'm using is conneted to. I can also get all usb controllers and usb cameras and their connection map via WMI, but can not match the same usb device bewteen DirectShow and WMI. Is their a identifier for me or some way else?
Besides, I'm using the "DirectShowNet" project to reach DirectShow api from C#
Thanks
Clark Nu
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Hi everybody
I have a sort of strange problem . On my computer I have VS2003 and MSSQL server 2000 . for a long period I have been running my application under development with no problem . I had to format my PC , reinstall SQL server and VS2003 with same application when database connection start to fail . I am using SQLdataconnection with connection string and using windows authentication for the SQL server . the strange part is that when I log in as administrator at starting the computer , the connection will work only once . then start failing all the time .
Any one having an Idea about this situation .
UnitecSoft
We will either find a way or make one .
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Sounds like some kind of user privilege problem. Does it work if you are not using Windows Authentication?
"The clue train passed his station without stopping." - John Simmons / outlaw programmer
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I Don't think its a user privilege problem , no reason to have a successful connection in the first run then a failure connection in the second run while no changes in anything between the two runs . could it be a setup parameters problem for the .NET framework or SQL server .
I will try to change windows Authentication to sqlserver security .
UnitecSoft
We will Either Find A Way Or Make One .
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hi everyone
Just to share the information , The reson of being unable to connect to sql server database via C# application was due to the anti virus protection I am useing ( Kaspersky ) . Disabling this program will solve the problem . maybe there is a certain setting within Kaspersky to allow or deny this access .
UnitecSoft
We will Either Find A Way Or Make One .
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I am working on an app which will have three version named Home (free), Pro (very little cost), Corporate (costly).
What is the best approach to accomplish this task?
1- Should I make three different Projects and apply necessary settings accordingly?
2- Should I make two different projects (one for home and pro and one for corp.) and use the settings (the license key) to find out which version user has Installed?
3- Should I make just one project and use the product key to distinguish which version was installed?
3- Other technique...
I would appreciate your help and advice. Thanks.
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Hi,
if you trust the licensing key or copy protection mechanism sufficiently to protect
the expensive version, I see no point (other than maybe size, or time to market) to
create trimmed versions; just let the license stuff control which parts are functional
and which are not.
That basically is what Microsoft did when they launched XP Home and XP Pro.
Dont know about Vista.
Hope this helps.
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IMO, the best approach is to put the pro only and corporate only functionality in dlls, which are dynamically loaded. That way you have one version, but you never ship people code that they are not allowed to use ( givn that they can decompile your code to remove any blocks that you put in there )
Christian Graus - Microsoft MVP - C++
"I am working on a project that will convert a FORTRAN code to corresponding C++ code.I am not aware of FORTRAN syntax" ( spotted in the C++/CLI forum )
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student_rhr wrote: 1- Should I make three different Projects and apply necessary settings accordingly?
That is a bit of redundancy.
student_rhr wrote: Should I make two different projects (one for home and pro and one for corp.) and use the settings (the license key) to find out which version user has Installed?
You could, but you may run into versioning nightmares.
student_rhr wrote:
3- Should I make just one project and use the product key to distinguish which version was installed?
You could, but someone could look into the code and try to hack a workaround.
"Any sort of work in VB6 is bound to provide several WTF moments." - Christian Graus
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What is the best industry practice?
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I am not 100% sure. It is something that does vary from software shop to software shop.
"The clue train passed his station without stopping." - John Simmons / outlaw programmer
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Hi Friends,
I need help. I have C#.Net 2005 DLL(COM Introp), and I want to use/call it in VB.Net 2003.
I have tried various posibillites but it doesnt work. Following are some of them.
1) Give project reference (Not allowed)
2) Add reference (Not allowed)
Is anybody help me how to do that?
Thanks in Advance
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Why would you want to use it in 1.1 when you could code it in 2.0 and have all the advantages of the extra features and better IDE?
You'll need to install the .Net 2.0 framework anyway so why not just use that?
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