I was trying to grab the string length of readData but when I try msgbox (readData.Length),
its giving me a large numeric digit instead.
Dim readData as string
serverStream.Read(inStream, 0, buffSize)
Dim returndata As String = _
System.Text.Encoding.ASCII.GetString(inStream)
readData = "" + returndata
msg()
End WhileI am trying to read from the ": " to the end of the line. I keep getting this error: Index and length must refer to a location within the string. Parameter name: length
If using the following in an if statement I get an error: If trg.Name.Substring(4, 6).ToUpper <> ("ABCDEF") Then I get the error: "Index and length must refer to a location within the string. Parameter name: length"
I assume this is because the string (trg.name) is too small for the 4, 6 substring. What would be the correct method of working around this problem? VB.net Studio 2008.
when i transfer the bytes sent by the client program to a string the string length is affected.when i put the bytes sent by the client program to a message box. it returns the corrrect text. but when i check the length it will return 8192 or higher. but the actual size is just 5.
My Code
Dim tcpClient As TcpClient = tcpListener.AcceptTcpClient() RichTextBox1.Text = RichTextBox1.Text & vbNewLine & "Connection accepted." ' Get the stream[code]....
I'm writing some code that takes a report from the mainframe and converts it to a spreadsheet. They can't edit the code on the MF to give me a delimited file, so I'm stuck dealing with it as fixed width. It's working okay now, but I need to get it more stable before I release it for testing. My problem is that in any given line of data, say it could have three columns of numbers, each five chars wide at positions 10, 16, and 22. If on this one particular row, there's no data for the last two cols, it won't be padded with spaces; rather, the length of the string will be only 14. So, I can't just blindly have
If I have a string Metal is hot : Metal length is 5 cm ; Metal is red. I want to get the sub string that is talking about length: hence I want to extract "Metal length is 5 cm".
With setting the string length. I have got a streamreader reading from a .doc file into a listbox and then i want to set the string length of how long it to be and then if longer to go to the next line so it will fit in the listbox as the listbox you cant scroll accross but you can up and down.
Ive done this so far:
Try Dim file_name As String = "K:\Uni\Year 2\Visual Basic\Report\MSDN\Absolute Beginner's Series VB Lesson 1\01 VB Lesson Transcript.doc"
I have the below code that if there is no .wav file in the current directory then it goes to the default windowsmedia directory to play a random .wav file.
But for some reason if there is no file in the current folder it will not go to the windowsmedia folder, do I have something wrong?
Dim FileNames As String() = System.IO.Directory.GetFiles(".", "*.wav") Dim FileNames2 As String() = System.IO.Directory.GetFiles("C:WindowsMedia", "*.wav")
I've created some classes that will be used to provide data to stored procedures in my database. The varchar parameters in the stored procs have length specifications (e.g. varchar(6) and I'd like to validate the length of all string properties before passing them on to the stored procedures.
Is there a simple, declarative way to do this?
I have two conceptual ideas so far:
Attributes public class MyDataClass { [MaxStringLength = 50]
[Code]....
This seems like a lot of work and will really make my currently-simple classes look pretty ugly, but I suppose it will get the job done. It will also take a lot of copying and pasting to get this right.
I am working on a program that will take in a string of length 7 containing either R,G or B for the colours. The program will then check that the string if 7 in length and if it contains any other characters than R, G or B then it will be invalid. I created this code but when I enter the right string length and characters it always gives me the error for not having the right string length.
Private Sub get_cars() Dim Letter As String Dim valid As Boolean Dim position As Integer txtPosition.Text = position [Code] ......
I am having some problems declaring a fixed lenght string in vb.net. I am studying code for using webcam in vb.net, although the code is from vb6 but I am told it works in dot net. Everyting else seems to be working except this line[url]...
I am trying to determine the length of a string in pixels.
I created a little test program for myself and placed three labels on it, each with the same font in a different size. I set the width of the label to 1024, the screenwidth. I used the same test text for each label, cutting it off at the last character that shows, so there is not hidden text running off the label to be included in the string width count.
What I have found is that the width of the string is being reported as wider than the label, even though, as I just mentioned, there are no characters running off the edge of the label. So, something's awry. Does anyone know how to get an accurate width?
Here follows the whole test code. You can drop three labels on a form and run it to see what I mean.
Code: Option Explicit On Option Strict On Public Class frmMain
Private Sub CmbLabour1_KeyPress(ByVal sender As Object, ByVal e As System.Windows.Forms.KeyPressEventArgs) Handles CmbLabour1.KeyPress If Char.IsDigit(e.KeyChar) = False And Char.IsControl(e.KeyChar) = False Then e.Handled = True
I want to be able to take a string that is entered into a textbox, and then put character 1 of the string in Textbox1, char 2 in TB2, char 3 in TB3, etc.
Also, how do I check the length of a string, like strlen in PHP?
Im working a lot with normal strings and during my development process strings with lengts of 10.000+ characters are being processes which makes it a my application run slower.Is it possible to shorten the length of any of string, in a way in which it also can be reversed?
I am receiving the following error when trying to replace spaces with %. "String cannot be of zero length. Parameter name: oldvalue" Dim Keywords As String = "test abc" Dim sqlkeywords As String sqlkeywords = Keywords.Replace("", "%") I have also tryed sqlkeywords = Replace(Keywords, "", "%") and it just returns the original.... test abc.
the string will be 56 characters even if it means appending whitespaces to the end.
in VB.NET
keyStr = Left$(baseKey + encPassword, 56)
will not necessarily be 56 characters. How can I force it to append whitespaces at the end if the baseKey + encPassword is less than 56 characters long?
I have an API that loads into memory from a button click. It can then either load an approx 10MB txt file (ASCII comma delimited characters/decimal list as a string) or live timed data from the internet. The idea is to be able to view the data in a text box. From there I can see what I am doing as far as spitting that info into a datagridview or database. The data is completely out of order in the txt file but has various Getinfo Functions / DLL's accessed via button clicks that split the data into its correct format to display in the text box. The problem I am having is not having fixed length strings in VB 2010. I don't know enough to work out if there is a simple work around or something more complicated required. Everything I have tried has left the textbox empty.
VB 2005 code that works: Option Strict Off - I want to solve with this ON Option Explicit On - I want to solve with this ON Imports VB = Microsoft.VisualBasic Private Sub Command3_Click(ByVal eventSender As System.Object, ByVal eventArgs As [Code] ....
I have a title (in one line) that can have different lengths. I need to print this title on A4 landscape - page ( draw string in print page event), but always it should be located in the middle of the page, regardless of length. If I want to determine the exact location I have to calculate the length of the string in pixels. Or maybe there is a better way to center the string on page? How can I do it?
I am chasing a strange error at a customer site and was wondering if it is possible that Environment.MachineName could return a zero length string. The docs say this is read from the registry but doesn't specify where. I can't imagine that a machine cannot have a netbios name but just wanted to ask.
EDIT
After some investigation, it appears that this was not returning a zero length string, but I was just interested if it is feasible.
I was thinking about writing a function to reduce the length of this code, and make it more consistent.However, I was wondering, is there already a way of doing this in .NET 3.5?
As a non .net programmer I'm looking for the .net equivalent of the old vb function left(string, length). It was lazy in that it worked for any length string. As expected, left("foobar", 3) = "foo" while, most helpfully, left("f", 3) = "f".
In .net string.Substring(index, length) throws exceptions for everything out of range. In Java I always had the Apache-Commons lang.StringUtils handy. In Google I don't get very far searching for string functions.
Edit:@Noldorin - My first encounter, although it took me several seconds to do the same in c#:
[Code]...
Note the static class and method as well as the this keyword. Yes, they are as simple to invoke as "foobar".Left(3). See also c# extensions on msdn.