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"If you can dodge a wrench, you can dodge a ball."
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if they are glass made kick them with hammer, and in case of steel/wood kick them with your head.. or follow any action movie made in hong kong
-----
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Well, that depends on if you have "manually operated" or "power" Windows.
If you have manually operated Windows, you'll find a hand crank on the inside of your door. Grasp this crank firmly in your hand and turn it once or twice to crack open the Window.
If you have the optional power Windows package, you'll find on switch, labeled appropriately, on the inside of the door. Briefly apply pressure to one side of the switch to operate the Window and lower it to the desired position.
Dave Kreskowiak
Microsoft MVP
Visual Developer - Visual Basic 2006, 2007
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Pack them in ice. Then, get a blow-torch...
----
It appears that everybody is under the impression that I approve of the documentation. You probably also blame Ken Burns for supporting slavery.
--Raymond Chen on MSDN
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very simple make sure you don't go through the door so having said that get a 150 pound hammer and bang hard on your window and you are done that's all you need.
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You could also drive closely behind a few semis on the highway. But you'll likey have a few chips before you get a crack. If you get some chips and no cracks, wait for winter. The first good freeze should turn some of those into cracks. Not the easiest way of course, but the best ways never are.
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Sorry, no more crack for you!
"Throughout human history, we have been dependent on machines to survive. Fate, it seems, is not without a sense of irony. " - Morpheus
"Real men use mspaint for writing code and notepad for designing graphics." - Anna-Jayne Metcalfe
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Hey what happened?
Regards,
Satips.
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I meant this kind of crack[^].
"Throughout human history, we have been dependent on machines to survive. Fate, it seems, is not without a sense of irony. " - Morpheus
"Real men use mspaint for writing code and notepad for designing graphics." - Anna-Jayne Metcalfe
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pouyan_piano wrote: how can i crack windows ?
A baseball or golf ball flung with sufficiently high velocity at the window in question should do the job. If that fails, you could try using a hammer.
/ravi
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Hey you men .... I MEANT HOW TO CRACK MICROSOFT WINDOWS ?
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pouyan_piano wrote: I MEANT HOW TO CRACK MICROSOFT WINDOWS ?
Ah. In that case, do the same thing, but at a Microsoft site. I believe they're headquartered in Redmond, WA.
But I should caution you that they have an impressively armed security department and you're likely to be whisked off in a paddy wagon with your arms tightly bound behind you if you attempt to perform such an action, or even perhaps conspire to do so.
/ravi
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Hi,
Is there any API that would save a CSV file to Excel format?
thanx
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You would have to custom code the file conversion, and it also depends on which excel format. Excel 2007 should allow you to convert using Office APIs, but previous versions I believe have more complicated file formats. Besides, doesn't Excel read csv files.
Regards,
Thomas Stockwell
Programming today is a race between software engineers striving to build bigger and better idiot-proof programs, and the Universe trying to produce bigger and better idiots. So far, the Universe is winning.
Visit my homepage Oracle Studios[ ^]
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Hi,
I'm using the ANTS profiler to profile performance of my application. It indicates lots and lots of processor time is going into AutoResetEvent.WaitOne() events. I've asked about this before on the codeproject, and the responses I got is that WaitOne() doesn't consume (m)any processor cycles.
The ANTS Profiler is making me doubt this. Since the program is indeed slow and I can't find any other bottle-necks. Can anyone tell me if ANTS is correct on this, or is it a know issue?
Thanks in advance!
Here's the piece of code I'm talking about (it's from a communications-driver):
void comDriver_DataReceived(byte[] newData)
{
lock (memory)
{
memory.Write(newData, 0, newData.Length);
streamPosition += newData.Length;
}
DataWasReceived.Set();
}
public void DataHandleThread()
{
byte[] b = null;
byte[] leftOver = new byte[0];
while (!stopReader)
{
DataWasReceived.WaitOne(-1, true);
DataWasReceived.Reset();
}
}
Standards are great! Everybody should have one!
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Hi!
i am facing problem when inserting very large amount of data in database. my application inserts 100,000 or more records in database but when i try to insert only 1000 records it takes too much time, approximately 2-3 minutes. and when i try to insert more than 1000 records application crashes.
I am using Microsoft Access and C# for my application. one more thing i am not using Stored procedures for this.
Can anybody tell me how can i make this insertion fast...?
Thanks in advance..
Regards,
Affan Ahmad Toor
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Affan Toor wrote: Can anybody tell me how can i make this insertion fast...?
Don't use Access. Use SQL Express or SQL Server COmpact Edition
only two letters away from being an asset
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Hi!
Thanks for reply! is it the only solution for my problem...? migrating from Access to SQL Server will cost alot of time and effort, i will have to do alot of work again...
Is there any other option like optimizing code or any thing else...? please dont tell me that i am standing on a dead end...!!
Regards,
Affan Ahmad Toor
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Access is not the best tool for that amount of data.
Affan Toor wrote: alot of time and effort, i will have to do alot of work again...
Depends on your data structure and coding. If your data layer were properly constructed the changes should be minimal.
only two letters away from being an asset
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Hi,
At design time there are a lot of properties that are available for a particular form or a control in the form. Those properties can be changed in the design time. But how do I disable/hide any one of these properties so that the designer cannot edit/update that property while designing. For ex: Say there is a button in a form. I want to disable the Image property in the Property List, so that the designer of the form cannot edit/put any Image on the Button. Is there any function/api present that can do so?
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Hi!
I m developing an application in C# asp.net....when i give value like <abc>in my text box and then insert it into sql server by using insert query ....it gives exception message
A potentially dangerous REquest.Form value was detected from the client
is there any way to insert values like this coz i have to do it must
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The exception is being thrown is a SqlException? Or is it from the page? It is more likely the exception is being thrown from the page as a HttpRequestValidationException. Setting ValidateRequest=true on the page will stop this, however it opens you potentially dangerous attacks.
ValidateRequest
Indicates whether request validation should occur. If true, request validation checks all input data against a hard-coded list of potentially dangerous values. If a match occurs, an HttpRequestValidationException exception is thrown. The default is true.
This feature is enabled in the machine configuration file (Machine.config). You can disable it in your application configuration file (Web.config) or on the page by setting this attribute to false.
Note
This functionality helps reduce the risk of cross-site scripting attacks for straightforward pages and ASP.NET applications. An application that does not properly validate user input can suffer from many types of malformed input attacks, including cross-site scripting and Microsoft SQL Server injection attacks. There is no substitute for carefully evaluating all forms of input in an application and making sure that they are either properly validated or encoded, or that the application is escaped prior to manipulating data or sending information back to the client.
only two letters away from being an asset
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thanx i will try that then i will inform U
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