|
hello Dave first of all thanx so mch for all dis and secondly i am new at windows so dat's why i don't know mch about windows services.See friend if this is not posssible to open an application in windows services then please send me the alternate way.for example,can i start my windows application as window services.I just want to do to show the pop up with a message on my taskbar.how can i do this with window services.
Hope this tym u get it ...
n thanks again
Bhanu madan
|
|
|
|
|
madanbhanu wrote: .See friend if this is not posssible to open an application in windows services then please send me the alternate way.
My "friend", there is no alternative way; a windows service is something that does not interact with the user. At all.
madanbhanu wrote: I just want to do to show the pop up with a message on my taskbar.
Follow the demo in the documentation[^].
madanbhanu wrote: <layer>.how can i do this with window services.
You don't; you create a normal app, start it when the user logs in. A Windows Service is started when the computer starts, and runs before you logon to Windows - there IS NO TASKBAR on that logon-screen.
Bastard Programmer from Hell
if you can't read my code, try converting it here[^]
|
|
|
|
|
The only way to do what you want is to write two programs that talk to each other. The first is your Windows Service app. It'll open some communication channel, like a Named Pipe, that it uses to talk to any application that wants to listen.
The second is a Windows Application, that starts from the Run key when a user logs in, and listens to the communication channel that the service starts. When it hears a message that the service sends it takes appropriate action, like putting up a MessageBox.
Forget the Task Bar notification for now. You've got enough to worry about without that.
|
|
|
|
|
No, again: the service does not start an application on a user desktop. Get away from that wrong concept! URGENTZ!
Rather look again at the functionality from the user's point of view: he'll see an icon in the system tray, with some messages popping up. That icon belongs to an application which is started when the user logs in. You can achieve that by putting a link to that application to the start-up folder.
|
|
|
|
|
Why do you even need a service? Why not just write an application that uses the SystemTray and is started up automatically when the user logs in?
See this[^] example for creating a sys tray application.
If there's a shortcut to your application in the Startup folder, your application will run automatically.
|
|
|
|
|
I am currently learning WPF and require some assistance in understanding some main concepts...
My XAML contains numerous GUI elements, one being a DataGrid called 'dataGrid1'
The DataGrid is populated in the main window using the following code fragment:
MyDataGrid gridData = new MyDataGrid();
gridData.PopulateData();
dataGrid1.DataContext = gridData.dt;
MyDataGrid is a class that is composed of a DataTable exposed through dt. PopulateData() performs a LINQ query on an EF context.
The code above works fine and the grid shows the query results.
What if I wanted to create a class which derives from DataGrid. How would such a class be accessible/linked/represented in the XAML?
A reader from Montreal, Canada
|
|
|
|
|
WPF allows a lot of customisation to be done without needing to use inheritance, what is it you are wanting to achieve by inheriting from the DataGrid? If you decide you just want to in herit from the DataGrid anyway, a good point to start your research would be some research on DependencyProperties. If you want to add behaviour with out inheriting a good starting point would be understanding AttachedProperties.
|
|
|
|
|
Thank-you for the reply.
For the purpose of having the DataGrid events exist within the MyDataGrid object rather than my main window. Would this be a bad approach?
|
|
|
|
|
If it is just one dataGrid used one time then generally speaking inheritance is not the best way to approach this. Although it is not the only way by any means to work with WPF, the MVVM design is very popular. If you have a set of requirements of what you are looking for your grid to do I will take a look and see if i can provide you with some sample code to get you started. One of the general principles of MVVM is seperating any code that involves your Data from the User Interface, using MVVM i find that it is quite rare that i am using EventHandlers for UI components.
If you are just looking to seperate out your event handlers you could do something like this:
public class MyWindow:Window
{
private MyDataCollection _gridData;
public MyWindow()
{
InitializeComponent();
_gridData = new MyDataCollection();
DataGrid1.RowAdded += _gridData.DataRowAdded;
}
}
public class MyDataCollection
{
public void DataRowAdded(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
}
}
I'm not saying the above code would be the right solution but you would not be inheriting a control you proabably don't need to if you are just aiming to seperate your Event Handling Code from your Window Code.
|
|
|
|
|
Sorry for the late reply. I was away from home the last 3 days.
Yes, I was thinking on the line of something like this.
For the moment, until I study recommended practices and patterns, this is not important.
There is one item that is bothering me though.
Why is it that when a given grid row is selected via code, the background is not highlighted in the same manner as when selecting the row via a mouse click.
For instance:
dataGrid1.SelectedIndex = 0;
The background row is highlighted in a light-grey color.
But clicking the row, the row is highlighted in blue.
I've determined this is a focus issue. If the grid is forced to have the focus, the row is highlighted blue. If it loses focus, it changes to grey.
In my particular case, it would be great to maintain the blue background on the row even if focus is lost. What would be the best way to do this?
modified 6-Aug-12 15:20pm.
|
|
|
|
|
try this.
Note this should be added inside the following xaml node:
<DataGrid>
<DataGrid.Resources>
<Style TargetType="{x:Type DataGridCell}">
<Style.Triggers>
<Style.Triggers>
</Style>
</DataGrid.Resources>
</DataGrid>
|
|
|
|
|
I placed a trigger on property IsSelected.
Works fine.
Thank-you.
|
|
|
|
|
Ed,
Would you be able to provide some guidance to this problem:
I have a DataGrid which is bound to a DataTable.
Relevant XAML & code ('<' intentionally left off at start of each line):
DataGrid Name="dataGrid1" IsReadOnly="True" ItemsSource="{Binding}"
DataGrid.Columns>
DataGridTextColumn Header="Name" Binding="{Binding Path=Name}" />
DataGridTextColumn Header="Path" Binding="{Binding Path=Path}" />
/DataGrid.Columns>
dataGrid1.DataContext = gridData.dt; // this is a DataTable with 3 columns.
The 3rd dt column is not shown on the grid.
The data table is sorted on the first column and contents are displayed.
The user can sort on either of Name or Path columns/headings by clicking on them.
My question, what is the best approach to update the grid data upon a user sorting on one of the columns? (This requires sorting the DataTable once again on the proper column)
This is what I have observed:
1. Adding a Click event handler on DataGridColumnHeader does fire the event.
I have observed that the value of columnHeader.SortDirection (in sender) is the
CURRENT value, not the target value. Is it correct to say that a given column
sort order goes through these phases:
null --> ascending
descending --> ascending
ascending to descending
I.E. By knowing the current state, the next state is determinable.
2. I can place a trigger in the DataGridColumnHeader's SortDirection property looking for Ascendiing/Descending/null but then what? Can I execute code against this?
If so, can you show me a code fragment.
Your thought on the above 2 approaches.
Furthermore, what is the proper way of solving this issue in your opinion?
Thank-you.
|
|
|
|
|
I'm afraid i have no experience with sorting on Grids, for most grids in the applications i work on we use a paid for grid component that handles the sorting for us. I'll have a quick look to see if i can figure out what you are after but i'd recommend you create a new post in the WPF forum with this question.
|
|
|
|
|
Ok had a little look at this, have you tried the following
<DataGrid Name="dataGrid1" IsReadOnly="True" ItemsSource="{Binding}" CanUserSortColumns="True">
<DataGrid.Columns>
<DataGridTextColumn Header="Name" Binding="{Binding Path=Name}" />
<DataGridTextColumn Header="Path" Binding="{Binding Path=Path}" />
</DataGrid.Columns>
</DataGrid>
For me adding the CanUserSortColumns="True" to the grid properties was enough to get sorting working, unless you need something more than visual sorting this should work for you.
|
|
|
|
|
Ed,
This sorts the columns visually but the DataTable data bound to the grid is not sorted.
Thank-you for your reply, I'll open a new subject.
|
|
|
|
|
I am trying to get a COM component properties. VS2010 shows the Dynamic Properties, but I can not figure out how to get them. Reflection always gives me an empty array of properties.
Can somebody help me?
thanks.
Bob Jiang
|
|
|
|
|
Try using a tool like OLE Viewer to view the COM file.
|
|
|
|
|
This is a fairly complex topic. You might want to read this[^] article to get some understanding of how to do it.
|
|
|
|
|
Thanks a lot, Pete!
I am going through the article right now, and am pretty sure it can solve my problem.
Bob Jiang
|
|
|
|
|
No problem. The concepts sure take me back.
|
|
|
|
|
Hi everyone,
i'm trying to decrypt some data that are sent me from an ASMX server. The server is not mine. The sysadmin provided me the decrypt function to decrypt the data:
public static string Decrypt(string strInputString, string strKeyString, string myIV)
{
if ((strInputString == null) || (strInputString.Length == 0))
{
return strInputString;
}
int num5;
int keySize = 0x100;
int blockSize = 0x100;
int length = keySize / 0x10;
if (strKeyString.Length > length)
{
strKeyString = strKeyString.Substring(0, length);
}
if (strKeyString.Length < length)
{
strKeyString = strKeyString.PadRight(length, '#');
}
Encoding.Unicode.GetBytes(strKeyString);
if (myIV.Length > length)
{
myIV = myIV.Substring(0, length);
}
if (myIV.Length < length)
{
myIV = myIV.PadRight(length, '#');
}
Encoding.Unicode.GetBytes(myIV);
byte[] bytes = Encoding.Unicode.GetBytes(strKeyString);
byte[] rgbIV = Encoding.Unicode.GetBytes(myIV);
RijndaelManaged managed = new RijndaelManaged
{
BlockSize = blockSize,
KeySize = keySize
};
MemoryStream stream = new MemoryStream();
for (int i = 0; i < strInputString.Length; i += 2)
{
stream.WriteByte(byte.Parse(strInputString.Substring(i, 2), NumberStyles.AllowHexSpecifier));
}
stream.Position = 0L;
MemoryStream stream2 = new MemoryStream();
CryptoStream stream3 = new CryptoStream(stream, managed.CreateDecryptor(bytes, rgbIV), CryptoStreamMode.Read);
while ((num5 = stream3.ReadByte()) != -1)
{
stream2.WriteByte((byte)num5);
}
stream3.Close();
stream2.Close();
stream.Close();
byte[] buffer3 = stream2.ToArray();
return Encoding.Unicode.GetString(buffer3);
}
I've created a Windows Form in C# that has four textbox, one for encrypted string, one for the key, one for the IV and the last for the decrypted result string.
When i receive this data from the server, I paste them in my form, and click on button associated to the decrypt function.
When the key is not at almost 16 character longer, it gets padded with "#" (pounds). Anytime the key doesn't need to be padded, the routine it's ok, and it prints the correct result string in the correct textbox. Anytime the key needs to be padded with "#", it shows me the exception "Padding in invalid and cannot be removed".
I've also tried to set PaddingMode to None, or other types, but it doesn't work. The sysadmin said that the problem is only mine. O_O
Does anyone can helps me ?
|
|
|
|
|
You usually get that error when the block size, key size, incorrect key, or initialization vector, or any combination thereof, don't match what was used to encrypt the data.
|
|
|
|
|
Yes, i know. But unfortunately i'm sure that the problem is the "#" character that the function use to pad the strings.
In fact, take a look to the encrypt function...
public static string Encrypt(string strInputString, string strKeyString, string myIV)
{
if ((strInputString == null) || (strInputString.Length == 0))
{
return strInputString;
}
int num4;
int keySize = 0x100;
int blockSize = 0x100;
int length = keySize / 0x10;
if (strKeyString.Length > length)
{
strKeyString = strKeyString.Substring(0, length);
}
if (strKeyString.Length < length)
{
strKeyString = strKeyString.PadRight(length, '#');
}
Encoding.Unicode.GetBytes(strKeyString);
if (myIV.Length > length)
{
myIV = myIV.Substring(0, length);
}
if (myIV.Length < length)
{
myIV = myIV.PadRight(length, '#');
}
Encoding.Unicode.GetBytes(myIV);
byte[] bytes = Encoding.Unicode.GetBytes(strKeyString);
byte[] rgbIV = Encoding.Unicode.GetBytes(myIV);
string str = "";
RijndaelManaged managed = new RijndaelManaged
{
BlockSize = blockSize,
KeySize = keySize
};
MemoryStream stream = new MemoryStream(Encoding.Unicode.GetBytes(strInputString));
MemoryStream stream2 = new MemoryStream();
CryptoStream stream3 = new CryptoStream(stream2, managed.CreateEncryptor(bytes, rgbIV), CryptoStreamMode.Write);
while ((num4 = stream.ReadByte()) != -1)
{
stream3.WriteByte((byte)num4);
}
stream3.Close();
stream2.Close();
stream.Close();
foreach (byte num5 in stream2.ToArray())
{
str = str + num5.ToString("X2");
}
return str;
}
It's perfectly specular to the decrypt function. If the key length >= 16, it's all ok, it doesn't get padded and the algorithm is ok. If the key length < 16, it gets padded with "#", and shows the exception.
I don't understand how VS could interpret a "#" in its textbox in a different way i want.
|
|
|
|
|
Try changing the PaddingMode so that you have managed.PaddingMode = PaddingMode.None;
|
|
|
|