|
what are the interfaces present in dotnet framework
|
|
|
|
|
Why do you ask?
I estimate that there are hundreds of interfaces in the framework. They are all present in the documentation. It would hardly be useful to just present a list of all the interfaces.
---
It's amazing to see how much work some people will go through just to avoid a little bit of work.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Is it me or is the built in reporting in .NET a bit weak? At least when reporting out of an Access database.
I cannot for the life of me figure out how to filter for specific records in a report. I cam bind and a get a report that lists all the records but I cannot find a simple way to use data binding (without writing code that is) and just filter for the data that I want. Seems to me that unless I am willing to manually bind to a data set that I populate with my own query I am a bit stuck.
|
|
|
|
|
i have created a website but i am facing problem to create option "remember password on same computer"
if anyone have idea or code to use the same option please send me.
thank you!!!
contact me: ashish.0619@gmail.com
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Hi,
i wanna use ftpconnection for upload a file from another pc(T) in interanet,so i
use
FtpConnection1.Connect()
FtpConnection1.UploadFile("C:\Documents and Settings\Mypc\My Documents\xmlfolder\xmlMetaData232a1ffd-c657-475c-b38d-ae3a898533fc.xml", "ftp://T/test1/")
but in this line i take a error with this message:
is there anybody that can help me
regards Maryam Gharibi
|
|
|
|
|
hi,
What is the difference b/w Manifest & metadata?
thanks
rahi
If you look at what you do not have in life, you don't have anything,
If you look at what you have in life, you have everything... "
|
|
|
|
|
Every managed module will have metadata, which tells about type, methods etc.
an assembly in a collection of one or more managed modules, in which one of the module's meteadata will contain the manifest for the assembly,
manifest contains information about assembly, version, public key, culture, other assembly this refers to , info about all the module ..
|
|
|
|
|
After manipulating long strings (as, for example, entered by a user in textarea) and saving to text file, I am having problems with ! characters appearing all by themselves in the middle.... I know I've read something about this somewhere, but can't find reference to it now. Has anyone else experienced this, and know what to do about it?
cheers
Fred
|
|
|
|
|
Unknown phenomenon.
Please expand (what is long?), show code, send data file, ...
Luc Pattyn
|
|
|
|
|
So I found that an internal list we wrapped with a public ReadOnlyCollection's members are still editable outside the class, through the ReadOnlyCollection. Maybe I am missing the point, is it simply the ReadOnlyCollection itself that is uneditable and not necessarily the members of the ReadOnlyCollection? What would be the point if this is true? Thanks for your help,
David Troyer
|
|
|
|
|
can u pls elaborate your question with some code snippets?
|
|
|
|
|
Is there a way to take away the arrow shown on a shortcut for a single application without altering the registry that affects all applications?
Thank-you for everybody's assistance.
|
|
|
|
|
On a shortcut icon? No, there isn't. That little arrow will show up on any icon you give to a shortcut.
Dave Kreskowiak
Microsoft MVP - Visual Basic
|
|
|
|
|
Hi,
After I have read several articles on msdn and other tech sites, I am now bogged now with a doubt.
Is CTS a specification checked by CLR or a component in CLR?
I read all about the goals of CTS. But inside the .NET framework how it is placed?
Is it defined as a set of rules inside CLR, hence can I take it is a component ?
Or is the CLR programmed to check the some specifications( which we call CTS) while executing a CLR compliant language?
Please explain me to get more insight in to this.
Thanks,
mani
|
|
|
|
|
The Common Type System is just a set of rules that defines a commonly used set of primitive types, like System.Int32 , that are used by all languages that the Common Language Runtime supports. These type are mapped to the types used in each language. For example, System.Int32 is an int in C# and an Interger in VB.NET. This makes it very easy for classes written in different languages to pass data back and forth without any custom, time-consuming, conversions.
The CTS is a set of rules, or specifications, at the core of the CLR, not a module or a component. It's part of the Common Language Specification that every .NET compiler MUST adhere to to manitain compatibility with the .NET Framework.
Dave Kreskowiak
Microsoft MVP - Visual Basic
|
|
|
|
|
How to Create a Full Custom Control?
|
|
|
|
|
Shashikant Sharma wrote: Full Custom Control
What kind of custom control do you have in mind? There are plenty of good books on the subject and articles on this site. Do a general article search and see what comes up
If you try to write that in English, I might be able to understand more than a fraction of it. - Guffa
|
|
|
|
|
hi Sharma,
exactly which type of custom control u want to build?
we have 4 types custom controls.
1.User controls are the simplest type of control.user controls combine more than one control in a logical unit (like a group of text boxes for entering address information).
2.Inherited controls are generally more powerful and flexible. With an inherited
control, you choose the existing .NET control that is closest to what you
want to provide. Then, you derive a custom class that overrides or adds
properties and methods.
3.Owner-drawn controls generally use GDI+ drawing routines to generate
their interfaces from scratch. Because of this, they tend to inherit from a
base class like System.Windows.Forms.Control. Owner-drawn controls
require the most work and provide the most customizable user interface.
4.Extender providers, which aren't necessarily controls at all. These components
add features to other controls on a form, and provide a remarkable way to implement
extensible user interface.
if want to c the example on this go thru this link.
http://www.akadia.com/services/dotnet_user_controls.html#Inherited%20controls
hope this will help u
Thanks,
Rahithi
If you look at what you do not have in life, you don't have anything,
If you look at what you have in life, you have everything... "
|
|
|
|
|
I have an interop issue when I use System.Object in .NET Framework 2.0
To get the StringArray from a ATL/COM DLL developed in VC++ 6.0
We donot know what method to invoke to retrieve this data.
While we are able to see the values of the String Array in the .NET Debug,
Able to view a StringArray in the debugger on managed Code (.NET) side.
Do not know the exact method to populate the Stringarray.
This is the core portion of the code
System.Object s;
LoadFilenameClass obj = new LoadFilenameClass();
obj.Load(FileName, out s)
^^^^^
At this juncture,
the values of the StringArray Class that have been sent by the VC++ DLL
are visible in the Watch.
[CHALLENGE] What specific method do I need to invoke
to extract the StringArray class.
Ravana Saras
|
|
|
|
|
I just install NET2005 --> my computer has NET2003 and 2005 .
I wonder to know what differences of them(.NET Framework 1.1, 2.0, 3.0 ...). Are there any documents about this?
Thanks a lot.
imagic
|
|
|
|