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BLaZiNiX wrote:
It's only because when I use TcpClient and TcpListener
It all depends on how you work with them; I don't know of any limitations with TcpClient/TcpListener.
To test this theory out you could create a simple server that accepts a connection, then spawns a new thread to handle that connection. In the real world this is a bad thing to do (too many threads will slow it all down); but it will help illustrate that there shouldn't be any such limitation.
James
"And we are all men; apart from the females." - Colin Davies
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yes I know I ask a lot, it's because I want to make a program and I don't have any idea . If u have one u can tell me
CYA
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BLaZiNiX wrote:
How can I create a multiple client chat app like one server to monitaring all the messages of all the client connected and a lot of the same client app to chat with each other
Should be a breeze if you use .NET Remoting.
May the Source be with you
Sonork ID 100.9997 sijinjoseph
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Try VNC, Clickety[^]
It comes with sources.
Concussus surgo.
When struck I rise.
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I made a invisible component with c#,I add it in toolsbox,but I can't change the default ico.help?
lost my way
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Scroll down one day
But its short so here it is: ToolboxBitmapAttribute
MYrc : A .NET IRC client with C# Plugin Capabilities. See
http://sourceforge.net/projects/myrc for more info.
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thanks a lot.
It is the answer.;)
lost my way
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How to prevent multiple instances of my app?
I remember using Mustex in other languages, but in C# there is a Mutex class but it does something different.
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For a DropDown ComboBox (ones that have editable fields), how can I set it to only accept uppercase?
The solution to this problem will require getting the TextBox control that is in the ComboBox. How do you do this?!
Thanks!
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maybe you could capture on TextChanged event and then do
myCombo.Text = myCombo.Text.Toupper();
or something like that.
Email: theeclypse@hotmail.com URL: http://www.onyeyiri.co.uk "All programmers are playwrights and all computers are lousy actors."
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Make sure you do something like this though:
if( myCombo.Text.ToUpper() != myCombo.Text )<br />
{<br />
myCombo.Text = myCombo.Text.ToUpper();<br />
} otherwise you will be setting the text over and over and over and over and over and over again.
James
"And we are all men; apart from the females." - Colin Davies
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Thanks guys for your input!
I am still curious though if there was a way to get access to the TextBox directly. Any thoughts there?
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I am working on a wrapper for the XML stuff in C#, and I want to add the ability to easily declare common namespaces. What I'd like to be able to do is have an enum called Namespaces, and do this
MyDoc.Namespace |= Namespaces.XSL & Namespaces.dt;
The question is, if I define a property and make it an int, will my set method get called, will this expand to
MyDoc.Namespace = MyDoc.Namespace |( Namespaces.XSL & Namespaces.dt);
or would I be better to define operator | and operator & for my enum ?
Christian
We're just observing the seasonal migration from VB to VC. Most of these birds will be killed by predators or will die of hunger. Only the best will survive - Tomasz Sowinski 29-07-2002 ( on the number of newbie posters in the VC forum )
Cats, and most other animals apart from mad cows can write fully functional vb code. - Simon Walton - 6-Aug-2002
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Christian Graus wrote:
The question is, if I define a property and make it an int, will my set method get called, will this expand to
MyDoc.Namespace = MyDoc.Namespace |( Namespaces.XSL & Namespaces.dt);
To quote my favorite professor. *clears throat* "Try it and find out"
I would bet that it would work as you expect, but you should put the FlagsAttribute on your enum and then use an enum of the same type for the property.
James
"And we are all men; apart from the females." - Colin Davies
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James T. Johnson wrote:
Try it and find out
Yes, you're right. The reason I often ask such dumb questions is I think about stuff on the bus and don't have .NET at work....
James T. Johnson wrote:
I would bet that it would work as you expect, but you should put the FlagsAttribute on your enum and then use an enum of the same type for the property.
Flags allows the enum to be a combination of the values ? Does it also automatically set the values to 1, 2, 4, 8, 16... ?
Thanks
Christian
We're just observing the seasonal migration from VB to VC. Most of these birds will be killed by predators or will die of hunger. Only the best will survive - Tomasz Sowinski 29-07-2002 ( on the number of newbie posters in the VC forum )
Cats, and most other animals apart from mad cows can write fully functional vb code. - Simon Walton - 6-Aug-2002
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Christian Graus wrote:
The reason I often ask such dumb questions is I think about stuff on the bus and don't have .NET at work....
I'm not faulting you for it; it was just my way of saying I don't know without actually saying it
Christian Graus wrote:
Does it also automatically set the values to 1, 2, 4, 8, 16... ?
I don't think so, and a quick test confirms that it doesn't. It would have been a nice feature; but I think in the face of consistancy it is a good thing that it doesn't.
James
"And we are all men; apart from the females." - Colin Davies
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James T. Johnson wrote:
I don't think so, and a quick test confirms that it doesn't.
Oh. So I need to do that manually ? Does the flag just allow an instance of the enum to be any value then, not just the ones defined ?
Christian
We're just observing the seasonal migration from VB to VC. Most of these birds will be killed by predators or will die of hunger. Only the best will survive - Tomasz Sowinski 29-07-2002 ( on the number of newbie posters in the VC forum )
Cats, and most other animals apart from mad cows can write fully functional vb code. - Simon Walton - 6-Aug-2002
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Christian Graus wrote:
Oh. So I need to do that manually ?
Yep
Christian Graus wrote:
Does the flag just allow an instance of the enum to be any value then, not just the ones defined ?
It allows any value, just like any other enum.
If you look at the IL for an enum, it is essentially a special type of class. Here is some code that is somewhat equivalent.
[Flags]
public enum TestE
{
ItemA = 1,
ItemB = 2,
ItemC = 4
}
public sealed class TestE : System.Enum
{
public const int ItemA = 1;
public const int ItemB = 2;
public const int ItemC = 4;
public int value__;
} A little bit of 'magic' is employed when assigning and retreiving the values in that referring to the value__ field isn't necessary. Essentially an enum is a strongly named collection of (compile-time) constant values.
Obviously a bit more magic is employed so that values can be cast willy-nilly to an enum type and add support for the Enum.Parse method.
James
"And we are all men; apart from the females." - Colin Davies
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James T. Johnson wrote:
It allows any value, just like any other enum.
So as far as values are concerned, an enum is still essentially an int ?
Christian
We're just observing the seasonal migration from VB to VC. Most of these birds will be killed by predators or will die of hunger. Only the best will survive - Tomasz Sowinski 29-07-2002 ( on the number of newbie posters in the VC forum )
Cats, and most other animals apart from mad cows can write fully functional vb code. - Simon Walton - 6-Aug-2002
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an int, byte, short, long, ... whatever you declare it to be; by default it is an int.
public enum FooBarBaz : <datatype>
James
"And we are all men; apart from the females." - Colin Davies
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add the Flags attribute to your enum, and your property can be the enum type.
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I've recently been pointed in the direction of RegExps for string replacement.
However, being new to both C# and RegExps, and Escape characters are giving me fits!
I've got got to remove the following characters from a string (not including the double quotes)
"`!@$%^*()+=\|[]{};:<>/?,~"
I'm having an awful time trying to evaluate what needs to be "escaped", and how many times!
ugh.
Mike Stanbrook
mstanbrook@yahoo.com
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