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Are you sure it's the app and not just a bad stick of memory or something. I use VS2005 daily and I've never had it crash.
...
I don't mind long titles so much, it's the Crystal Reports poster boy that's getting to me.
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Hmm...
Programming in Microsoft Windows under Microsoft Visual Studio using Microsoft Visual C++ and the Microsoft Foundation Classes.
As far as MS is concerned, the above could read...
Microsoft Microsoft Microsoft Microsoft Microsoft Microsoft Microsoft Microsoft Microsoft Microsoft Microsoft
...and they'd be just as happy.
Jeremy Falcon
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Wait till all the Longhorn books hit the shelves...
cheers,
Chris Maunder
CodeProject.com : C++ MVP
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Agile Development on Microsoft Windows Vista Ultimate Edition with Microsoft Windows Presentation Foundation in Microsoft C# and Microsoft .NET Framework 2.0, 3rd Edition
regards,
Paul Watson
Ireland
Feed Henry!
K(arl) wrote:
oh, and BTW, CHRISTIAN ISN'T A PARADOX, HE IS A TASMANIAN!
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Hello,
I leave all my books at home. I just started with my graduation project and I bought all my books before. I might move them to the office when I need them there. I won't leave my books there since I don't have any private space there.
Anybody else working in a so called flex-office?
Behind every great black man...
... is the police. - Conspiracy brother
Blog[^]
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Most stuff about technology will be out of date before it even leaves the printing press.
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Hello to everybody,
I'm trying to call a function in a win32 dll; the documentation, written in C++, for the dll reports the calling convention as:
SHORT Start (UCHAR ucNumCom, ULONG usSpeed)
In a module, I wrote the following line:
Declare Function Start Lib "abc.dll" (ByVal ucNumCom As Char, ByVal usSpeed As UInt64) As Short
Then I wrote the following code (in the click event of a button)
Start(CStr(serialPort).Chars(0), speed)
(where serialPort is a string variable and speed is a UInt64 one).
The dll function executes and returns me an error code of InvalidParameter; don't get me wrong: i don't fall in any Try...Catch branch.
Is there anybody out there who can help me?
Thanx in advance
Marco Turrini
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Try posting your question in the VB.NET forum[^].
Software Zen: delete this;
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Techy books that don't come with a PDF version should be sent back to the publisher with a big note saying "Gutenberg died in 1468, get with the times!"
eVersions of books are great if for no other reason than searching.
regards,
Paul Watson
Ireland
Feed Henry!
K(arl) wrote:
oh, and BTW, CHRISTIAN ISN'T A PARADOX, HE IS A TASMANIAN!
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and they stay there.
I learnt my lesson long ago, that books taken into work usually disappear. I've lost count of the number of books that I've had to buy again because they went walk-about.
I find books rarely have much use at work. Books are great for learning and for knowledge gathering, which I prefer to do at home.
If I need to reference something for my work, then Google usually gives me the answer.
Michael
CP Blog [^] Development Blog [^]
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I ran into that problem several years ago. One of my books disappeared that I used fairly often. I went wandering around, asking about it, with no results. Finally, I was idly talking to someone, and it turned out they had it.
"I borrowed it one day, and you weren't around."
"You couldn't leave a damn note?"
She wouldn't talk to me after that.
For a long time after that I kept the shelf units over my desk locked.
Software Zen: delete this;
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I think you need to add that option too.
I work from home and thus, they are always at home/work.
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This got me thinking. Since I like to drink at home, and I'm not allowed to drink at work, I guess I'll never be working from home.
Chris Meech
I am Canadian. [heard in a local bar]
When I want privacy, I'll close the bathroom door. [Stan Shannon]
BAD DAY FOR: Friendly competition, as Ford Motor Co. declared the employee parking lot at its truck plant in Dearborn, Mich., off limits to vehicles built by rival companies. Workers have to drive a Ford to work, or park across the street. [CNNMoney.com]
Nice sig! [Tim Deveaux on Matt Newman's sig with a quote from me]
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No doubt about it, the book i need the most is always the one i [left at the office|left on my bedstand]...
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That makes two of us.
- Dy
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Shog9 wrote: left on my bedstand
You read programming books in bed?
Software Zen: delete this;
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Quickest way to fall asleep. At the moment I have 3/4 tech books beside my bed and one novel. If I have trouble sleeping (which happens a lot) I open one of the tech books and read until I get so damn bored/tired that I can fall asleep.
Regards,
Brian Dela
Blog^
Co-author of The Outlook Answer Book... Go on, order^ it today!
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FWIW, i also sleep at my desk...
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I run my own home based business and there is no option for that All of my books are both at home and in my office.
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So, I had the first vote
//This is not a signature
while (I'm_alive) {
printf("I Love Programming");
}
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leppie wrote: I dont have any books, well I dont use any Just the net & MSDN.
I rarely buy programming books now. Google usually can answer the questions that I used to use books for.
I do however have a large collection of books on software development process and management.
Michael
CP Blog [^] Development Blog [^]
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Michael P Butler wrote: I rarely buy programming books now. Google usually can answer the questions that I used to use books for.
I do however have a large collection of books on software development process and management.
++
/bb|[^b]{2}/
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