Is there any way to make a class instance public?In my mainform I define an instance of a certain class and then later on in some other forms which appear I want to alter this class.I try and pass them through when creating new instances of these other forms and it tells me Error3<instance of the class I want> cannot expose type <the class> outside the project through class <the form I want to edit it with>Which I gather from documentation is about it defeating the purpose to have a private class suddenly be thrown aroudn.but then how do I make it public? I can't define it in the first place as public myXClass as XClass, it only accepts private.
I have a class inside a class.I need to expose the properties of the 2nd class to other classes, therefore it is public.However, I do not wish other classes to be able to create instances of this 2nd class, it should only be instantitated from its parent class.I thought I could resolve this issue by making the constructor of the 2nd class private, but this even prevents the parent class from instantiating its child class! How can I work around this, do I have to make the constructor public and allow anybody to create an instance of the class?
I want to created a nested class that can only be visible to and instantiated from the parent class.But I also want to be able to use an instance of the nested class through a public variable of the parent class.I tried making the nested class private, or making the nested class' constructor private, but it won't compile.Is it possible to do this in .NET?
I have a class "Character" that holds character stats and skills. I make a new instance of it "MyCharacter". The problem is I would like to use it like this. MyCharacter.stat.charactername ="whatever" Where stat is another class within Character or MyCharacter.skill.lockpick=10, b But I can't seem to do it.
I'm working through a book that does not provide a lot of example code and what it does provide is in C#. The book refs vs 2005 but I'm using vs2008. The author asks for the user to create a solution with two projects, one winforms and the other a class library (called DependentAssm). The class library is added as a reference to the winforms project In the class library, he asks one to create a new class called SayHelloComp. The project created a file called class1.vb, and a class called class1 which I renamed to SayHelloComp. I left the file name alone, that's ok right?
In vb.net, you can address a public variable from another form using the form name along with the variable.
form2.show form2.k = 3
However, if you use a form variable to show an instance of the form, you must use that variable name to address the public variable. Two instances of the same form are displayed in the following example. The public variable k is assigned a value of 3 only in the first instance of the form, the one from form2.show. frm.k can be used to assign a value to the other form.
dim frm as new form2 form2.show frm.show form2.k = 3
Assuming only one instance of the form is shown in the application, is it reliable to address a public variable using the form name (form2.k), or is it better to show the form with a form variable and use that to refer to the instance of the form (frm.k)? Would the same answer apply to a property as well as a public variable?
I am looking for a way to make my app running in a single instance mode and showing the MainWindow of the first instance when another instance is launched.I do a quick search on the internet but I did'nt find anything to open the MainWindow of the first instance or it was for Windows Form not for WPF.
I need to convert the following code, so that it exists as a created class "Payroll" that utilizes "Get" and "Set" elements. Unfortunately, I'm completely lost.
Public Class frmPayroll Private Sub frmPayroll_Load(ByVal sender As System.Object, ByVal e As System.EventArgs) Handles MyBase.Load
my proble is the following: I have a class MyClass and another class Modifier, which has a method ModifyMyClass(ByRef mc as MyClass) that receives a MyClass instance as ByRef parameter to modify it. A smell of the code is:
I have a class in which some of the fields are also classes.I can put values in the "normal" properties, but in the others when o try to assign values it gives the: "Object reference not set to an instance of an object"But the code compiles fine.
dados_Defenicao = New ServiceReference1.draftClaimEntryDefinition dados_Defenicao.arCode = "123" dados_Defenicao.claimMarket.warrantyType = "w" - Here it gives the error
I have a class in which some of the fields are also classes.
I can put values in the "normal" properties, but in the others when o try to assign values it gives the: "Object reference not set to an instance of an object"
But the code compiles fine.
dados_Defenicao = New ServiceReference1.draftClaimEntryDefinition dados_Defenicao.arCode = "123" dados_Defenicao.claimMarket.warrantyType = "w" - Here it gives the error
If you run this code you will see that the 500 PictureBoxes that are added ( this is easier to show than adding pixels as a pixel is only a single point ) fall mainly on the diagonal.With regard the RANDOM class, why should this be like this when the bounds of the instances are? >>
p.Location = New Point(x.Next(0, Me.Width + 1 ), y.Next(0, Me.Height + 1 )) as in this code.>>
I've createda vb.net class library where I've defined a number of small classes... nothing complicated, just working with strings, sending emails, etc.In another project, I reference the class library and I'm seemingly able to create an instance ofone of tclasses - intellisense shows me all of the plic properties, methods, etc... all looks perfect. No compile errors at all, nothing b gumdropsand lollipops.When I run the app I'm working on that references the class library, it fails at the point where I'm creating an instance of the class and gives me a vague exception, "System.TypeLoadException".
I need to create a new instance of a class that needs a member of the calling class. But i can't pass a reference to the calling class through the constructor.The solution i am looking for is something like this:
Public Class ChildClass Public Sub New(args) _MyMember = GetMemberFromCallingClass()
[code]....
I want this to work without having to manually pass any references or variables from the calling class to the new instance of ChildClass.
I want to create a class that will "search" for something. Basically I load up the "search item" when the class is created and inside the class is logic to do the "search". The result of this logic will be more "searches" that I want to start. How can I have the logic in the class create another instance of the class itself?
I'm getting an error in .net when trying to declare a Public class on my code behind page.
Partial Class _Default Inherits System.Web.UI.Page
Public someVariable as integer Public someClass as className
Protected Sub Page_Load(ByVal sender As Object, ByVal e As System.EventArgs) Handles Me.Load [...]
The error I'm getting is BC30508: 'someClass' cannot expose type 'className' in namespace '<Default>' through class '_Default'.The goal here is accessing the class properties in script blocks on the aspx page like this <%=someClass.classProperty%>
I'm not sure if I'm trying the right methods (I've tried several ways of declaring the public class) or if it can even be done..
I am making a program where there is a number of strings are needs and they need to be pre-defined. I rather not store it all in a XML file as I don't want anyone going in and altering them.
Has anyone ever created a class of public constants just to make cleaner code or is it considered bad practice?
I've tried searching... a lot for the answer, but as I'm not too sure what exactly I'm trying to do I can't seem to find anything. I'm trying to write a dll in order to handle errors thrown from a vb.net app. In the dll I need several forms (I'm not totally sure if they can have forms - I'm a bit of a newbie when it comes to dll's) for which the user can type in their message about the error and submit it.
I have a class that is primary configuration for my application. It has 70 plus public collections that holds all my data. I am trying to do a For Each through each of these public collections, so that I can process the data through my code, but I am getting following error:
I've got an issue where Public Events in a class aren't being seen outside the class. Code looks like this: Public Class Class1 Public Event Event1(someargs as object) Public Sub New() 'Perform Some Code RaiseEvent Event1(someargs) End Sub End Class
Can i add an event to a Public NotInheritable Class?, in particular i would need to have an event that would listen to property change.System.Web.ClientServices.ConnectivityStatus has a property IsOffline, i would need to know when this property has changed?
I have Errorlog.vb in my vb.net 2008 project. It is for public class. Public Class ErrorLogger I want to call this public class anywhere. So on EACH vb file I use import "mainproject name".ErrorLogger How can I declare once some where at the beginning and that class will be availabe through out the project?