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Hi!
My code looks like this:
//----------------------------------------------------------------------------
input = new FileStream(tempDirectory + "\\" + tempArchiv.Dateiname, <br />
FileMode.Open);<br />
output = new FileStream(sicherungsOrt + "\\" + tempArchiv.Dateiname, <br />
FileMode.Create, <br />
FileAccess.Write);<br />
reader = new BinaryReader(input);<br />
writer = new BinaryWriter(output);
//here I read from the reader and write it to the file with the writer
//...
//then I flush and close the input, output, reader and writer
input.Close(); <br />
reader.Close();<br />
<br />
writer.Flush();<br />
output.Flush(); <br />
<br />
output.Close(); <br />
writer.Close();
//here I do other things, but I don't do anything with the files I wrote and read
//and then I try to delete the file I wrote, but it occurs an exception and I don't know why
System.IO.File.Delete(sicherungsOrt + "\\" + tempArchive.Dateiname)
//----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exception looks like this:
The process is not able to access the file, because an other process uses it.
What's wrong with my code?
thanks, Gerhard
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The wrapper reader/writer classes will call the wrapped streams close/flush methods. I suggest u remove either and try again. Everything else looks fine to me.
top secret
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Cool ... it works...
thank you!!!
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One thing to add (since leppie already helped you solve the problem), use Path.Combine instead of concatenating your paths with separators yourself. This makes sure that the correct directory separate is used for the target platform without having to recompile. This makes your code more portable. Also, you can use the Path.DirectorySeparatorChar if you want to know which to use. Each platform's version of the CLR is responsible for returning the proper char . Path.Combine also takes into account whether the directory reference already ends in the appropriate directory separator. This usually isn't a problem, but you can never be too sure.
Microsoft MVP, Visual C#
My Articles
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Hi,
Does anyone know of what tools/sdk are available which would allow me to write server software to stream mp3 audio over the internet?
Thanks very much~
Regards,
John
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This is a message for people who have been developping missing collection in .Net (such as sets, deque, etc...) or are simply missing those for every day life.
The objective is collect in a single project a number of forgotten data structures for .Net.
If you are interrested to contribute, observe or test, you can register at http://ncollection.tigris.org[^]
Jonathan de Halleux - www.dotnetwiki.org -
MbUnit - QuickGraph
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Jumping the gun a bit?
Messages
Your account does not have the "Project Page - View" permission needed for you to access the page you requested in the ncollection project (view your permissions). Either ask the project administrator for more permission, or log in using a different account.
You are currently logged in as leppie.
top secret
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On a lighter side, once you have collected all these joints, who will smoke them?
top secret
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I'm more a beer-drinker type but I'm sure I could find people interrested for that kind of collection traversal.
Jonathan de Halleux - www.dotnetwiki.org -
MbUnit - QuickGraph
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Don't you think it would be better to wait for generics for such exercise?
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Maybe, on the other side, there are already at least 5 data structures scatered on CodeProject, not mentionning other internet resources, so the material is already there.
Besides, I do not think the "upgrade" to generics will be too painfull. The most cool feature, from a colleciton implementaiton view, is the new way of defining iterators which will be much more easier.
Besides, creating the framework to test the fixture will not be lost with generics.
Jonathan de Halleux - www.dotnetwiki.org -
MbUnit - QuickGraph
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I saw you mention this idea earlier today (well, I saw it earlier today) and think it's a neat idea, but let me suggestion something: it's ".NET", not ".Net" or ".net" (in which case the latter is reserved for use by Microsoft and only in logos). This is documented on Microsoft's site.
Microsoft MVP, Visual C#
My Articles
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don't hesitate to sneak in the project...
Heath Stewart wrote:
it's ".NET", not ".Net" or ".net"
Aaaargh, am I going to get sue for this!
Jonathan de Halleux - www.dotnetwiki.org -
MbUnit - QuickGraph
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Jonathan de Halleux wrote:
Aaaargh, am I going to get sue for this!
No, not unless you trademark a product with ".NET" (or any variant) in it and make enough money for Microsoft to care about (and even then, they might not so long as you're supporting their cause, but IANAL).
Just thought since you're making a go of this and will probably want it to look nice/official/whatever, you might want to use proper casing.
Microsoft MVP, Visual C#
My Articles
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I have a project where I want to have the value in a listbox displayed in ToolTip rather than the default tooltip text whenever a MouseOver event occurs. However, when I created the eventhandler I was a bit surprised to see that it does not appear to return the coordinates of the mouse on the control.
I know it can be done -- even VS does it when hovering over a collapsed region. Any suggestions on how to deploy this?
I need to
a) determine either from sender or e which field is being hovered over, then
b) if it is blank area (default text) or populated area (display value of field)
_____________________________________________
Of all the senses I could possibly lose, It is the one called 'common' that gets lost the most.
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You can always use the static Control.MousePosition property to get a Point in screen coordinates, which you can translate by passing that Point to the PointToClient method of the ListBox . Using that, you can find which item is under the cursor.
Unless you want to go to the trouble of encapsulating the ToolTip common control and all its messages and what-not, you could use the ToolTip component and call SetToolTip(yourListBox, "Your tooltip") , but I'm not sure exactly how that positions itself (I would assume it uses the coordinates of the current mouse position like it usually does). You can call that each time you want to change the text.
Microsoft MVP, Visual C#
My Articles
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Thanks Heath. I figured out everything but the static MousePosition location. That got me rolling with all the fun mathematics!
Could have been great but the MouseHover event seems to never be getting raised.
On to investigate that bugger now.
_____________________________________________
Of all the senses I could possibly lose, It is the one called 'common' that gets lost the most.
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Hello everybody!
Does anybody know how to get information about an assembly using the System.Reflection namespace?
I want to list all namespaces,classes,methods,......
Please help me
petermax2
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Why don't you read MSDN ?
There's a lot of info and samples there.
Free your mind...
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Hello
I have a Windows Service developed in C#. On startup it gets a Instance of a simple Gatewayobject. And make it available on the TCP port 13101.
On a WinXP Professional maschine there are no problems starting it but on win2k it only starts in 2 out of 10 times.
I have a WindowsForm app that do the same thing as the WindowsService and there are never a problem with that app on win2k or winXP.
What can be the problem?
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Do you get any exceptions? Also try setting AutoLog to true and check the event logs for any errors that might have occured. Without knowing what the Gatewayobject is and what it attempts to do, I can't really offer you anything more than that.
Microsoft MVP, Visual C#
My Articles
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Hi,
I want to use mciSendCommand function in C# using Interop.
In that function the last parameter is a DWORD_PTR (ulong) that pointes to a structure that contains parameters for the specified command message.
What type shoud I use in that parameter when declaring the function in C#, and how can I convert a given struct/class to that type?
I'm declaring the structures like:
<br />
[StructLayout(LayoutKind.Sequential, CharSet=CharSet.Unicode)]<br />
internal class MCI_OPEN_PARMS<br />
{<br />
public IntPtr dwCallback; <br />
public uint wDeviceID;<br />
...<br />
}
Thanks,
Pedro
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DrGreen wrote:
DWORD_PTR (ulong)
DWORD_PTR equals UInt32 not UInt64.
top secret
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