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u r ? damn ass ? ( I think you mean dumb ass ) ur ? cause ? ( I think you mean because )
I see I underestimated your stupidity. How did you figure out how to turn your computer on ? Or do people in the sheltered workshop help you ?
Christian
I have drunk the cool-aid and found it wan and bitter. - Chris Maunder
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I love it when weak minded pussies edit their posts to change completely what they said. I should have recognised you for a wimp and quoted you in my reply.....
oOomen wrote:
so i asked him where can i find them because i expected to find the source code of this algorithms too.
Yeah, which makes you an idiot. All you need to do is google. If you can't turn any of the explanations I found in seconds into source code, then you should not be let near anything that resembles source code, you should go and try to work out HTML or something instead.
oOomen wrote:
first: i did not ask you.
You asked on a public forum
oOomen wrote:
second: what are you doing here if can find everything in google.
Helping people who ask questions that are not so easy to google. And advising idiots like you to search for yourself.
oOomen wrote:
third: think before you want to write something.
Most people who read my articles here think that I do. Why don't you try thinking at all ?
oOomen wrote:
fourth: never write stuipid to the people u do not know, got this
Every post you make convinces me further of your stupidity.
oOomen wrote:
i think that u would never say something like this to someone directly, cause this someone would break u f***in face for this
Well, I guess you don't know me that well.
oOomen wrote:
have your sickness any name?
Yeah, sick of idiots.
Christian
I have drunk the cool-aid and found it wan and bitter. - Chris Maunder
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save ur remarks for u cause u need it ok
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you have to learn how to recognize in the cases like this that you are wrong!
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Bwhahahahahahahahahahaaa !!!
It's amazing, there's 670 THOUSAND members on this site, and yet I've managed to find the stupidest one, on the C# forum. I don't recall anyone on the C++ forum ever being this dumb. I feel everything I ever said about C# and .NET is being proved before my eyes......
C'mon, post more poorly spelled half sentences. In the meantime, I'm going to read your profile to verify my suspicion that you're 12 or under.
Christian
I have drunk the cool-aid and found it wan and bitter. - Chris Maunder
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What made you decide to say this instead of
URL : http://www.codeproject.com/script/comments/forums.asp?msg=653169&forumid=1649#xx653169xx
From: oOomen
be a man, not a sh*t!
the think i see it that u r real swine with the sick head, so go to your doctor stupid idiot, but i think it is a hopeless case for u.[laugh]
????
You weak, worthless pussy. Why are you still posting on this ? You made an idiot of yourself, now live with it.
Christian
I have drunk the cool-aid and found it wan and bitter. - Chris Maunder
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Don't judge all C# developers by a few people. Also, I've seen some pretty moronic people on the C++ forums, too.
"Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called sons of God." - Jesus
"You must be the change you wish to see in the world." - Mahatma Gandhi
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Hey, don't get me wrong. There are problems with C#, although some of the major ones are being fixed, they should have been in the first release ( generics are a major one ). However, I use it every day at work, and it certainly has pluses over C++, as well as minuses. I was more referring to the marketing of C#/.NET being designed to appeal to the lowest common denominator, and therefore to attract morons. There are good programmers and bad ones in every language, but the ratio differs. I'd prefer my chances of finding a good C++ to a good VB programmer, for example. C#, I'm not sure yet where the ratio will sit. I sure hope it sits with us, and not with this other guy......
Christian
I have drunk the cool-aid and found it wan and bitter. - Chris Maunder
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pretty moronic dude you can see in the mirror, too
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The answer you imagine to have managed, is always quite close to you.
It's lights, which comes in your eyes after it was reflected from your body.
good luck and have a nice day
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http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&q=Square+Root+Algorithms
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Hi every body!
My app has 1 array which consists of 3 comboboxes, each comboBox of the array uses the same comboBox_ChangedItem(object sender, System.EventArgs e) method.
When those ComboBox are Changed item, How can I know which combobox was changed? (I mean how can I get index of changed combo in the Array?)
Thanks!
xyz
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I imagine, the way u doit is not a good way to solve ur porblem!
<br />
for(int i = 0; i < 3; i ++) if(comboboxarray[i] == (ComboBox)sender) break; <br />
put it in ur methode.
only 3 ComboBox have to use this comboBox_ChangedItem method in other case it does not work.
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You can take the sender, and check it's uniqueID against those of your comboboxes, and work it out that way. Or if you want to use the combobox for something in the method, just do this:
ComboBox myCombo = sender as ComboBox;
Hey presto, do whatever you want with myCombo, it's the one that was selected.
Christian
I have drunk the cool-aid and found it wan and bitter. - Chris Maunder
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he wanted to get the index of an array.
could u just read his question first and think befor u write an answer. thanks.
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I'm sorry, I was so busy thinking about how stupid you are while I read your answer, that I did in fact forget the specifics of the question. Now, one more thing.
Shut up and die.
Christian
I have drunk the cool-aid and found it wan and bitter. - Chris Maunder
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Christian Graus wrote:
Shut up and die
, planning on any new articles, what happened to the one you sent to the developer's journal or was that Dr Dobbs. I guess it was a very long time back.
Regards,
Kannan
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I'm currently learning lots of ASP.NET here at work, and so hopefully I'll learn some things that I can write articles on. I've sure had to work out some stuff I couldn't find here, although as soon as I write an article, I'm sure I'll be told it's here already
It was Dr Dobbs and no, they never contacted me or answered any of the numerous emails I sent them. If they ever published those articles, I sure didn't get paid, and with the VC6 being hopelessly out of date now, the one on namespaces is also out of date, at least in the talk of compiler coverage. I hate Dr Dobbs.
Christian
I have drunk the cool-aid and found it wan and bitter. - Chris Maunder
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You can search the array:
index = System.Array.IndexOf( sender );
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Several days ago I create a little apps, I decorate it with a nice image in background.
Suprisely , I found something weird...
button control has a backgroundImage in property grid at design time, but it doesn't exist in label control property grid.
I check in MSDN, then I found that property backgroundImage is property of Control Class. button control & label control are derived from Control Class.
So, I think property of BackgroundImage should be appear too in Label control design time.
Any one can explain to me about this "weird" thing ?
"Courage choose who will follow, Fate choose who will lead" - Lord Gunner, Septerra Core
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Things can be overridden to not work. Practically everything in System.Windows.Forms is just a wrapper of some common control. The Statis common control (which Label wraps) does not support background images, so the label overrides that to basically do nothing. The IL (compiled form) reafirms that.
Typically, though, a label's BackColor is set to be transparent in order to show the background image.
-----BEGIN GEEK CODE BLOCK-----
Version: 3.21
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Hi,
I would like to make an application that monitors the Internet Information Server (IIS) and pushes the web pages requested by a specific IP address to another web page on the server machine. This would then enable an administrator sitting on the server machine to see the web pages that a specific client is watching in real time.
An ugly way to do this is to continuously monitor the IIS log file and push a new page to the administrator if the relevant IP address is seen in a new log entry.
I am however thinking of some alternatives:
1) Since it is not possible to delete the current log file, this may be due to it being kept open by a file stream run by a specific logging service (not sure here!). If this is so, is it possible to attach to this file stream and monitor it for specific key words (IP addresses)?
2) There must be an event triggered before writing to the log file. In that case, is there a way to intercept the event that writes to the log file and check for the IP address before it is written to file? (It would in fact be helpful to just know which event this is, as I could then just access the log file when necessary)
Thanks for any help or input!
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If this is ASP.NET (I'm assuming, since you're in the C# forum!), why not just write an IHttpHandler or handle the HttpApplication.BeginRequest event (usually in the Global.asax file) to do the work? The IIS logs can grow to be very huge and must be immediately accessible or IIS could bomb-out. Also, the IIS logger uses a buffer technique where large blocks of the log are pre-allocated without anything being written to them (and are allocated ahead of time). You could use the FileSystemWatcher to watch for changes, but this wouldn't be assured to work since the IIS logger doesn't automatically flush the buffer (so it seems) in order to be more responsive.
-----BEGIN GEEK CODE BLOCK-----
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Thanks for your input Heath! Unfortunately a large part of the web pages are not ASP.NET (this is in the C# forum due to me writing in C#), othwerwise your ideas would work well.
At least I now know some more about how the log files work, and see that it is not a good idea to use them. So I guess I'm back to square one...
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There's always the old fashion way...so get (back?) into VC++ and write an ISAPI filter!
An ISAPI filter (if you don't know, or for all the kids out there...) is mapped into IIS and handles each request. Why, ASP.NET itself is an ISAPI filter (along with file type mappings to tell IIS to let ASP.NET handle a particular extension instead of it).
They aren't hard to write, but you definitely want to make sure you write good, robust code because these handle every request and run for the lifetime of IIS.
-----BEGIN GEEK CODE BLOCK-----
Version: 3.21
GCS/G/MU d- s: a- C++++ UL@ P++(+++) L+(--) E--- W+++ N++ o+ K? w++++ O- M(+) V? PS-- PE Y++ PGP++ t++@ 5 X+++ R+@ tv+ b(-)>b++ DI++++ D+ G e++>+++ h---* r+++ y+++
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