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Your "my way or the highway" attitude is what's condescending. People were trying to help, but you reject it as not up to par.
The difficult we do right away...
...the impossible takes slightly longer.
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Member 15750670 wrote: I don't need to know "why" until I can get it to work the way I want
If you don't understand the "why" behind the functionality, how are you going to "get it to work"? The only way that can happen is if you guess and get it correct, and that will almost never happen on the first try.
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"Why" sometimes takes a lot longer to figure out than following a good example, trying it out, and seeing if it works. I have used that technique many times. I would love to know the "why" every time, but oftentimes, you don't have the luxury of the time to study that. You're right about not getting right on the first try, especially if the example is too general. That is where tenacity comes in. 
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I used to think like you, way back in the day. I'm entirely self-taught. Eventually, you, like I, will find out that "trying stuff is faster" is actually false. You may find code that works for what you want, you'll even figure out how it works, but you will not figure out the WHY behind the code. You'll also miss the limitations and design considerations that went into the "why".
All that missing information is what is going to make your "find, copy, paste" approach take much longer than you think it does now.
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Member 15750670 wrote: I don't know how to use a DataGridView. I have not found enough examples There are lots of good examples here on CodeProject: Search: DataGridView[^].
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If you can't write the control, how do you expect to create an application that is "like Quicken, only better"?
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I'd like to know what his "new app" is going to be called - just so I can avoid it.
Would you trust your money to somebody who wants to swap one control he doesn't know how to use for another he still doesn't know how to use, and expects it to work exactly how he wants it to right out of the box?
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
"Common sense is so rare these days, it should be classified as a super power" - Random T-shirt
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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Maybe he works for Microsoft, or TSB. 
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By buying (licensing) one that someone else has already written. There used to be tons around. I can't find them anymore.
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There are tons of control libraries out there. You're just not going to find a control for a very specific, and niche, function.
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I don't believe this is that niche. A check register is very common. I would think that SOMEONE has written that control. You said "There are tons of control libraries out there." Where exactly would "out there" be?
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In the world of controls, a "check register" is VERY niche. I think the closest you're going to find is something akin to an accounting ledger, but it won't be a perfect fit, and even then, you're going to have a hard time finding a control.
The world of controls is more for "general use", like buttons, dropdowns, list views, charting, knobs, gauges, and the like. If you find a "check register" control, you're going to be extremely lucky and probably end up using something that is about a decade old, at least.
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I see. That is good information. We don't have controls on the mainframe side.
Thank you.
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i am beggainer please help me
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Why do you claim to be from the U.S.?
"Before entering on an understanding, I have meditated for a long time, and have foreseen what might happen. It is not genius which reveals to me suddenly, secretly, what I have to say or to do in a circumstance unexpected by other people; it is reflection, it is meditation." - Napoleon I
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Probably because it's the default location setting when you sign up to CP.
Unless you change it to your actual country, US is what it stays.
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
"Common sense is so rare these days, it should be classified as a super power" - Random T-shirt
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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I'd recommend you learn English first; most documentation is in English, most open source projects use English, the articles on this site are in English.
You need not master the entire language, but it would help a lot if you could gain access to those resources.
Bastard Programmer from Hell
"If you just follow the bacon Eddy, wherever it leads you, then you won't have to think about politics." -- Some Bell.
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I have been trying to answers "Email Validation" and "Domain Validation" kind of questions with a perspective of Internationalized Domain Names with relevant answers. I wonder why all the answers which I post, despite following community guidelines get flagged as spam??
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This is the wrong place to ask this, but I'll answer it anyway.
Your posts were legit - or at least mostly legit - but when you get a new member posting the same links to multiple questions and those are nearly all over ten years old it looks very dodgy.
I moderated the posts when the automated system brought them to my attention, and decided that on balance they were not sufficiently legit to let through, and on balance were probably the start of what we call "rep point hunting": posting to old questions for rep points in the hope they wouldn't get seen - a form of site abuse.
But ... I wasn't sure that you were abusing the system, so I added you to my "watch list" to see what you did instead of throwing you off the site immediately.
Unfortunately there was no way to contact you without letting your posts through, so when this message came up I let it through and wrote this reply.
While I applaud your urge to help people, it's a good idea to stick to new questions, rather than 10+ year old ones - and avoid "link heavy" replies, particularly to questions with good replies already. After that amount of time, it's unlikely that the original poster is at all interested in the problem any more!
Answering old questions can be seen as rep-point hunting, which is a form of site abuse. The more trigger happy amongst us will start the process of banning you from the site if you aren't careful. Stick to new questions, post less link heavy solutions, and you'll be fine.
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
"Common sense is so rare these days, it should be classified as a super power" - Random T-shirt
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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Thank you for the reply OriginalGriff. I have already been through one account banning. Thank you for not banning this account of mine outrightly. My endeavor behind answering 10 year old questions is for the new developers who might have similar questions, from taking that old approach which is not correct. I sincerely do not care about bounty points. What I do care about is the overall user awareness. These kind of Old and highly visible questions, when one searches with relevant tags, keep on coming at the top of the search and end up misguiding the naïve implementers.
Your suggestion to "Ask a new question" though valid, can cause a new issue, as I imagine. I would be again flagged as spammer for "Asking the same question". Won't I?
It is indeed unfortunate that we cannot connect directly through profile in DMs. I would have loved to do that to thrash out this detail.
I am not trying deliberately to be "link-heavy". But to avoid that, answers would needlessly get heavy.
Please guide.
modified 18-Aug-22 2:15am.
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I didn't suggest that you "ask a new question" - I suggested that you stick to "answering new questions": Quote: While I applaud your urge to help people, it's a good idea to stick to new questions, rather than 10+ year old ones My apologies if that wasn't clear.
Certainly if you post a question just so you can answer it you will get kicked off very quickly!
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
"Common sense is so rare these days, it should be classified as a super power" - Random T-shirt
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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I have been caught once or twice by the 'ten year old question' trap. If you see a new question (on the home page) that you think you might be able to answer, and go to it but someone else has already given a good answer (or, more commonly in my case, you realise that you cannot answer the question), your eyes gravitate to the 'similar questions' list on the right-hand side. If you follow ones from there, you can sometimes find ones that you might be able to answer; so you compose an answer. If you are lucky, you spot that it is a 'ten year old question' before posting; if less lucky, you only spot it after posting.
Perhaps we should / could raise a 'bugs and suggs' to have the age of the question more prominently displayed.
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It's been raised in B&S before. The conclusion is that adding new answers to old questions is perfectly fine, so long as you're adding something new to the discussion.
The problem here is that this is a new member, posting answers which have multiple links to a relatively-unknown site that looks like a blog. As Griff said, this is typical behaviour for a site-driving spammer or rep-point hunter, which is why the solutions are being deleted as "spam".
"These people looked deep within my soul and assigned me a number based on the order in which I joined."
- Homer
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I was updating domain and e-mail validation questions with new approaches that need to be taken due to advent of the Internationalized Domain Names. With answers specific to the programming language mentioned in the question and the specific APIs they can use for the IDN compliant implementation. If that is not "adding something new to the discussion", what is?
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