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QuestionWhat's Wrong With This??? Pin
Kevin Marois8-Nov-20 19:00
professionalKevin Marois8-Nov-20 19:00 
AnswerRe: What's Wrong With This??? Pin
Jörgen Andersson8-Nov-20 20:11
professionalJörgen Andersson8-Nov-20 20:11 
AnswerRe: What's Wrong With This??? Pin
Richard Deeming8-Nov-20 21:47
mveRichard Deeming8-Nov-20 21:47 
GeneralRe: What's Wrong With This??? Pin
Kevin Marois9-Nov-20 7:42
professionalKevin Marois9-Nov-20 7:42 
QuestionC# - Use app between 2 times and get the time from database Pin
Valakik8-Nov-20 12:16
Valakik8-Nov-20 12:16 
AnswerRe: C# - Use app between 2 times and get the time from database Pin
Dave Kreskowiak8-Nov-20 18:54
mveDave Kreskowiak8-Nov-20 18:54 
AnswerRe: C# - Use app between 2 times and get the time from database Pin
Gerry Schmitz9-Nov-20 1:51
mveGerry Schmitz9-Nov-20 1:51 
QuestionWeird problem with Custom StreamReader with Read override not reading correct number of bytes during base method call Pin
pr1mem0ver6-Nov-20 16:24
pr1mem0ver6-Nov-20 16:24 
AnswerRe: Weird problem with Custom StreamReader with Read override not reading correct number of bytes during base method call Pin
Gerry Schmitz6-Nov-20 18:18
mveGerry Schmitz6-Nov-20 18:18 
GeneralRe: Weird problem with Custom StreamReader with Read override not reading correct number of bytes during base method call Pin
pr1mem0ver7-Nov-20 5:00
pr1mem0ver7-Nov-20 5:00 
GeneralRe: Weird problem with Custom StreamReader with Read override not reading correct number of bytes during base method call Pin
Gerry Schmitz7-Nov-20 5:37
mveGerry Schmitz7-Nov-20 5:37 
GeneralRe: Weird problem with Custom StreamReader with Read override not reading correct number of bytes during base method call Pin
pr1mem0ver7-Nov-20 13:25
pr1mem0ver7-Nov-20 13:25 
GeneralRe: Weird problem with Custom StreamReader with Read override not reading correct number of bytes during base method call Pin
Gerry Schmitz8-Nov-20 5:53
mveGerry Schmitz8-Nov-20 5:53 
GeneralRe: Weird problem with Custom StreamReader with Read override not reading correct number of bytes during base method call Pin
pr1mem0ver16-Nov-20 14:58
pr1mem0ver16-Nov-20 14:58 
AnswerRe: Weird problem with Custom StreamReader with Read override not reading correct number of bytes during base method call Pin
OriginalGriff8-Nov-20 1:35
mveOriginalGriff8-Nov-20 1:35 
GeneralRe: Weird problem with Custom StreamReader with Read override not reading correct number of bytes during base method call Pin
pr1mem0ver16-Nov-20 15:10
pr1mem0ver16-Nov-20 15:10 
AnswerRe: Weird problem with Custom StreamReader with Read override not reading correct number of bytes during base method call Pin
Richard Deeming8-Nov-20 21:39
mveRichard Deeming8-Nov-20 21:39 
GeneralRe: Weird problem with Custom StreamReader with Read override not reading correct number of bytes during base method call Pin
pr1mem0ver16-Nov-20 15:06
pr1mem0ver16-Nov-20 15:06 
QuestionSystem.IO.File.WriteAllLines exception Pin
_Flaviu5-Nov-20 23:52
_Flaviu5-Nov-20 23:52 
AnswerRe: System.IO.File.WriteAllLines exception Pin
Richard MacCutchan6-Nov-20 0:01
mveRichard MacCutchan6-Nov-20 0:01 
AnswerRe: System.IO.File.WriteAllLines exception Pin
OriginalGriff6-Nov-20 0:18
mveOriginalGriff6-Nov-20 0:18 
What do you expect @destFile to be?
You do not need an "@" in front of a variable name unless you are trying to use a keyword as a variable name - and if you are doing that, then you need to rethink your coding style. To call something public or string would require the "@" prefix, because they are both specific words that the compiler understands - but destFile is not, and does not need it.
C#
int @public = 666;
Console.WriteLine(@public);
...
string destFile = "...";
Console.WriteLine(destFile);


And if you don't assign a value to destFile before you use it as an output location, you will get an error - it needs to contain a valid filename, in a folder that is not restricted for security reasons:
C#
string destFile = "D:\Test Data\byList.csv";
File.WriteAllLines(destFile, elem);


So use the debugger to examine exactly what you have in destFile before you try to write to the file and check it's a fully valid filename!
If you don't know how to use it then a quick Google for "Visual Studio debugger" should give you the info you need.

Put a breakpoint on the first line in the function, and run your code through the debugger. Then look at your code, and at your data and work out what should happen manually. Then single step each line checking that what you expected to happen is exactly what did. When it isn't, that's when you have a problem, and you can back-track (or run it again and look more closely) to find out why.

Sorry, but we can't do that for you - time for you to learn a new (and very, very useful) skill: debugging!
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GeneralRe: System.IO.File.WriteAllLines exception Pin
_Flaviu6-Nov-20 2:33
_Flaviu6-Nov-20 2:33 
AnswerRe: System.IO.File.WriteAllLines exception Pin
Richard MacCutchan6-Nov-20 5:21
mveRichard MacCutchan6-Nov-20 5:21 
GeneralRe: System.IO.File.WriteAllLines exception Pin
_Flaviu7-Nov-20 21:08
_Flaviu7-Nov-20 21:08 
QuestionHow to extract part of HTML source? Pin
Member 5697394-Nov-20 7:53
Member 5697394-Nov-20 7:53 

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