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Hi,
I am developing a project in .NET (C#). I am trying to embed the email sending service in my project. I am able to send both plain and html formatted emails. But i m stuck in trying to get my style sheets and other flashy stuff appear in my html email. Can anyone tell me why my stylesheets and user controls just dont show up in the mail.
I would appreciate if anyone can come up with some suggestions,
Thanx.
Moinuddin
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Am I blind, or did they leave out all the style and extended style flags so that you could set things like numeric only?
What, do I have to write an event handler?
Marc
Help! I'm an AI running around in someone's f*cked up universe simulator. Sensitivity and ethnic diversity means celebrating difference, not hiding from it. - Christian Graus Every line of code is a liability - Taka Muraoka
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Guess they thought one would use NumericUpDown for numerics, so Case & PasswordChar were sufficient...
Some ideas are so stupid that only an intellectual could have thought of them - George Orwell
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HI, i've been exploring the net framework classes for a while and i didn't find a email class to send mails (pop3) . I'm missing or .NET does not owns a class like that? i think, Python brigs one in its class library, the NET framework, very much bigger, should do too
Thanks in Advance
Marcos
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You can send email with SMTP.
Take a look at System.Web.Mail[^]. Then take a look at this article[^] to see an example usage.
Jon Sagara
Hi! I'm Melanoma, Moley Russell's wart.
-- Uncle Buck
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Hi Marcos,
Do you want to Send Mails or Recieve Mails.
When you send mails, you use SMTP. POP3 is used for recieving emails. This clears and solves your first sentence of your posting.
Regarding your doubt regarding .NET Framework classes to send mails, check out
System.Web.Mail
(It has an exhaustive collection of classes and methods to send mail)
Check out http://www.c-sharpcorner.com/ for some code snippets in checking mails using POP3.)
deepak
Deepak Kumar Vasudevan
http://deepak.portland.co.uk/
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Hi all,
I have a C++ and C# application. The core C++ application runs three times faster than the C# application. If I run NGEN on the C# application, would it be on par with the C++ application?
Please advise...
Deepak Kumar Vasudevan
http://deepak.portland.co.uk/
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Here's [^] an article from Jeffrey Richter entitled : "JIT Compilation and Performance: To NGen or Not to NGen? " that should help you out.
HTH
Cheers,
Simon
"The day I swan around in expensive suits is the day I hope someone puts a bullet in my head.", Chris Carter.
animation mechanics in SVG
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You would probably need to run some benchmarks. In general NGEN is supposed enhance performance. I find alot of the overhead of .NET applications is on the first run, which has to load the CLR.
I would guess that C# app would never be faster than native C++ compiled code, but that's just an opinion.
I would be interested to know your results.
- Good Luck
R.Bischoff | C++
.NET, Kommst du mit?
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Hi all,
I would like to know whether an assembly that has been passed through NGEN.EXE can be forwarded to a Windows CE .NET Runtime. Or since because it has already been NGENed into native image for WinXP (or the source) it is no longer valid.
I am having this doubt, since I have an NGEN image here and deployment need for Windows CE.
Thanks in advance,
Deepak Kumar Vasudevan
http://deepak.portland.co.uk/
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What's up with this error? It seems to be everywhere with no real answer?!
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"resolved" might be the key here. DNS resolution is failing. Make sure you use absolute network path to DB in your connection string. Also try to use IP instead of domain name
R.Bischoff | C++
.NET, Kommst du mit?
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Dear All,
1- Is TAPI supported in .NET?
2- How can I access COM/USB Ports in .NET?
Regards,
Sassan Komeili Zadeh
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Sassan Komeili Zadeh wrote:
- Is TAPI supported in .NET?
Sadly not yet. Your best bet is using COM interop with the TAPI 3 COM interfaces. I had a brief attempt at using TAPI 2 and Managed C++ but it was more trouble than it was worth. In the end I wrapped my TAPI 2 code in a COM object.
Michael
The avalanche has started, it's too late for the pebbles to vote.
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Hello all.
I have VS.NET (Production) installed on my machine now. What is the "fall-out" of installing VS.NET 2003 Final Beta on the same machine?
TIA.
Don
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I know this is properly the dummest question? But still I want to know, recently I am been assigned to devlope a program in Apple Mac OS (a program that has to interact with Excel - how do u do that? there isn't OBDC in Apple).
Anyway, I was wonder can program that written in C# or VB .NET work in Apple Mac. can it??
(Sorry for wasting space, time, in reading this real stupid question)
If there are three people walking with me, one of them can be my teacher.
[Andy]
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Thanks, I am going to check now...
If there are three people walking with me, one of them can be my teacher.
[Andy]
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If you're app is commercial (at least according to the terms of the SSCLI licence) then you cannot build it with that framework (Microsoft's SSCLI that runs on FreeBSD). That's not too big a deal, though, because the SSCLI doesn't support any of the System.Windows.Forms namespace - all you can do is write console apps.
--
Russell Morris
"Have you gone mad Frink? Put down that science pole!"
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After, I checked FreeBSD, it isn't what I really need. So, What kind of software should I use???
That will allow C++ to interact with Excel in Apple Mac?
If there are three people walking with me, one of them can be my teacher.
[Andy]
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Hi all,
I was wondering if anyone out there could point me towards a good business-focussed discussion of the benefits and pitfalls of developing Windows software, particularly database-centric client/server and n-tier systems, in .NET.
Bit of a wish, but any suggestion appreciated.
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Dunno of any specific discussions apart from those on CP. From what angle are you asking ?
Christian
No offense, but I don't really want to encourage the creation of another VB developer.
- Larry Antram 22 Oct 2002
C# will attract all comers, where VB is for IT Journalists and managers - Michael
P Butler 05-12-2002
Again, you can screw up a C/C++ program just as easily as a VB program. OK, maybe not
as easily, but it's certainly doable. - Jamie Nordmeyer - 15-Nov-2002
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Hiya Christian,
I work at a company that builds a Windows POS product. To date we've used MFC and in the Dark Ages Borland OWL, but now that .NET has appeared on the scene it appears to be a good candidate for the development of some new and significantly large features we're taking on, not least because of the speed of developing user interfaces, easy memory management, and because we're looking for an alternative database access technology to the outdated BDE, making ADO.NET an attractive candidate.
As we move towards an enterprise solution that includes non-POS clients we're considering a more tiered architecture with one or more business object layers. We've done a bit of this with COM already, but also want to consider using .NET objects because of the relative ease of development and apparently flatter learning curve for new developers.
Our other choices for moving forward are to stick with MFC, COM/DCOM and probably OLEDB, all good technologies but falling steadily behind the main MS push, I feel.
Anyhow, I've got a week to present a summary analysis of the potential use of .NET technologies in our products... When it comes to supporting a decision either way, it looks like my task is a bit harder than I first thought
Thanks for the reply (ps, do I remember rightly that you're also hangin' here in sunny Brisbane?)
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Choosing .NET is a matter of application need you have. I would choose .NET in the long run if the application does not really need high performance (GC is a show stopper, lot of memory overhead), and has a strong web exposure (ASP.NET).
Choosing .NET is not a matter of underlying technologies such as COM, etc. since .NET supports them as well (both ways).
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