|
ha ha ha ha... oh God!!! O My Sweet Blake... thank you very much for it all... but he he he he... it was not meant to be via HTTP ... O boy!
There are images stored on client's hard disk... of times when system was crashed. Right? When he calls the customer care, they ask him to run my application and my application sends those images to the support center. HTTP is not allowed coz of complexity and coz of other issues as well Thats all
Anyway, thanks again... you are like life saver... wishing you more luck;
keep up the good work
mE
---------------------
A gasp of breath,
A sudden death:
The tale begun.
A rustled page
Passes an age:
The tale is done.
|
|
|
|
|
Seems to me you should think that one through again. Why exactly is HTTP not allowed? It need not be on port 80 even, this is strictly a private exchange between parts of your application.
It is less complex rather than more to use the existing infrastructure. Compare the number of lines of code between my first example and my second one, and the second one is much more robust and functional.
You have use a protocol of some sort, as you can see from the simple protocol that I made up in that first example. That protocol is in fact much like HTTP.
Is it that IIS is not allowed?
-Blake
|
|
|
|
|
Yes. They don run IIS. Rather my part of the application is going to be the part of big picture. Thats why I am going after the customized development. Otherwise I know, IIS and HTTP and ASP .NET are cool thingys .
You know, legacy systems are greatest ropes tied across your wings. What you say?
Heyy... that gives me a idea... let me paste this line in lounge and lets see comments of ppl What you say?
You are Making My Day Well.
mE
here is a poem for you... I don know whether you like poetry or not, but still... enjoy
Then in the blink of an eye the time had come,
For you to go,
And others to mourn.
But all in all, something's still left behind:
The way you made others feel,
Which carries on the same spirit,
As if for real.
---------------------
A gasp of breath,
A sudden death:
The tale begun.
A rustled page
Passes an age:
The tale is done.
|
|
|
|
|
Hi, may I know how I can declare a static variable in a simple application? I know that in C/C++, static int x can be used. How about in C#? Thanks.
|
|
|
|
|
same way man...
static int whatever;
Free your mind...
|
|
|
|
|
Ooh, I fount out that static declaration!! And, I solved that page number problem that I posted some time earlier!! Finally~!
|
|
|
|
|
One catch with static is that they are only class level and not method level as you can in C++.
Rocky <><
www.GotTheAnswerToSpam.com
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Dear Sirs,
Please guide me how I can generate a unique system-hardware dependent serial number in C#. I want this serial be different from a pc to Another one and never be the same.
Regards,
Sassan Komeili Zadeh
|
|
|
|
|
GUID is the solution...
By the way, you must know that the created GUID is realy globally unique only in case your computer has a Network Adapter. In case it doesn't, the GUID is only locally unique!
using System;
namespace PavelTsekov
{
class MainClass
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
//let's create a GUID with C#
System.Guid guid=System.Guid.NewGuid();
Console.WriteLine(guid.ToString());
Console.ReadLine();
}
}
}
Free your mind...
|
|
|
|
|
Dear Guillermo,
Actually I want the code return the unique serial number always the same. If you run your code in a loop you will see it will return a unique one each time.
Sassan
|
|
|
|
|
Getting the NIC's serial is unique and how often do u replace a NIC?? Not much.
leppie::AllocCPArticle("Zee blog"); Seen on my Campus BBS: Linux is free...coz no-one wants to pay for it.
|
|
|
|
|
I'm working on the harddisk serial number. So when an application is installed, it returns a code... The user has to call to get the serial to enter with that code. Afterwards the program encrypts the harddisk serial number into a file. And compares it when the app is launched.
When the user re-installs the pc, he has only the replace the file.
When I get trough this, I will post it here
|
|
|
|
|
Dear Sir,
Everybody doesn't have Network Inteface.
Regards,
Sassan Komeili Zadeh
|
|
|
|
|
Is there a way to make the OpenFileDialog preview the file when the user clicks on a file. I want to preview an image.
Gary Kirkham
A working Program is one that has only unobserved bugs
I thought I wanted a career, turns out I just wanted paychecks
|
|
|
|
|
Regards,
which namespace/class give me methods to get unicode for any character?
Thanks
-nSun
---
"Art happens when you least expect it"
|
|
|
|
|
|
I have a problem. I have created my own control. It is similar to listview, but not quite. Therefore there are a collection with all the items. When adding elements in the designer through the Collection Designer "Changer", the properties of each item does not seem to persist in the autogenerated code for the form... What am I doing wrong?
Thanks in advance,
Gooky
|
|
|
|
|
You need to apply the DesignerSerializationVisibilty attribute i think
leppie::AllocCPArticle("Zee blog"); Seen on my Campus BBS: Linux is free...coz no-one wants to pay for it.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The specs for C# 2.0 are now available on MSDN at
http://msdn.microsoft.com/vcsharp/team/language/default.aspx
There is a discussion forum for the language on the same page.
Eric Gunnerson
Visual C# Compiler PM
|
|
|
|
|
Good...
C# Rules !!!
Free your mind...
|
|
|
|
|
At this point I like the partial classes and generics the most.
I am sorry to say but I found the anonymous methods kinda Java'ish.. Maybe I'm going to like them later on, when we get to use this stuff
The iterators i BIG fun, you could make a random sequence of numbers so you almost never know what item is returned by the foreach loop
I am looking forward to the new visual studio .net 2004, I hope it makes development even easier than it already is.
Good luck Eric!
Greetings....
|
|
|
|
|
I think the anonymous delegates are somewhat a matter of taste, and should be used wisely ("If swelling persists, contact a professional programming practitioner immediately"...)
There is the opportunity to make your code much more ugly, but there are also cases where you can make it much more local. If you want to be able to have a named iterator that can take some code, or you want to specify the MatchEvaluator for a Regex.Replace(), you can make your code more understandable (probably...) with an anonymous delegate.
But I don't view them as a replacement for standard delegates.
|
|
|
|