I have a class that contains a list of properties which serializes just fine. However I need one of those properties to contain a collection of another class to give me sub classes
Example XML
<VideoOptions>
<property1>value1</property1>
I have a class that is serializable. I would like to compute the MD5 of it. I already had a function in the project to get a MD5 from a Stream, so I reused it, and created a function to convert an object to a memorystream. The code is as follows. Does anyone see any problems, but more to the point, is there an easier way to do this that I'm simply missing?
I have a serializable class and structure I created for an ArrayList to be access within a Web Application. The problem I am having is the count comes back as zero after calling New. I debugged the code and the Arrylist is being populated
I have the following architecture for my project:UI -> Web Server -> App Server -> Database
I am using SOA architecture for my project. My Web Service is residing on AppServer having BL (Business Layer) / BO (Business Object) / DAL (Data Access Layer). I am exposing the BL using Web Service. I am getting the service reference to this Web Service at WebServer by creating the proxy using WSDL.exe. Now my question is:
EDIT: SI have a web service which uses a class of functions in order to return data used in various business processes (via InfoPath). One of the functions takes a given SQLCommand object and executes it into a SQLDataReader. Now depending on the SQL command text used this may return one or many rows of one or many columns. So what is the best class for this function to return bearing in mind it needs to be serialized by the web service.
My existing code is: Dim array As New ArrayList Try
Question: I must get the content of all sessions in a HttpModule, under .NET 1.1. (don't ask my why certain people still use it) I can write the module, I can get the sessions. But... sessions are stored as
I would like to create a customer class and be able to add collections to it. I know I have to use List<T>. Look at the scenario below. I have a customer class, order class and address class. I would like to instantiate the customer class and add orders and addresses to it. E.g.
Dim oCustomer As New Customer("Acme Inc.") oCustomer.Orders.Add(New Order(1)) oCustomer.Orders.Add(New Order(2)) oCustomer.Addresses.Add(New Address("Street 1")) oCustomer.Addresses.Add(New Address("Street 2")) [Code] .....
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 have a custom collection class that I would like to pre-populate with data from the database. Basically it would search for "submembers" that are related to the "member" data record using the "member"'s primary key id.
I figured the best way to do this would be in the constructor of the class, but I am not so sure now. The collection class does not have any properties (the member class does).[code]...
What's really the point in using the former?It's hard to use linq if I used the former. I have to convert that to an array first which is difficult because there is no (asarray) function.I think I would change all of my code that's using System.
Collections.Specialized.StringCollection to System.Collections.Generic.List(Of String)
I've got a 'MyDataTable' class that inherits from System.Data.DataTable I've implemented ISerializable in my class and have a 'Public Overrides Sub GetObjectData...' But when I try to serialize the an object of 'MyDataTable' I get an error saying that 'MyDataTable' is not marked as serializable.
I have the follow VB.NET class definition:<Serializable()> Partial Public Class Customers End Class
Inside another file I have the same thing (with different methods and variables of course). When I compile, I get the following error:Attribute 'SerializableAttribute' cannot be applied multiple times.The error is pretty self explanatory. My question is though, if I just mark the one class as Serializable(), can I assume the entire class with be marked as serializable()? In other words, Do I only need the serializable() tag in 1 spot in the class?
I have a class called Truck and a form called frmTruck I have some code like this in a method. It recieves obj as Truck
Dim ms As New MemoryStream(1000) Dim bf As New BinaryFormatter(Nothing, New StreamingContext(StreamingContextStates.Clone)) bf.Serialize(ms, obj)
To simplify my code, I have basically something like this for frmTruck:
public class frmTruck private truckValue as Truck public sub DoSomething()
[code]....
During the LoadTruckFromDatabase function I call the SerializeTruck method, here everything goes fine. But when I call the SerializeTruck just before End sub of DoSomething, it goes wrong I get an exception saying that frmTruck is not serializable My truckinstance doesn't have any references to frmTruck...
I'm trying to create a custom control that contains a List(Of Panel). I quickly ran into an error about the base class Panel being nonserializable. So I created my own class that inherits from Panel and implemented the ISerializable interface. At the surface, everything appears to work, at least everything at design time. I don't know what would happen if I tried to run the application. Anyway, the errors occur when I try to open a file that contains my custom control. For example, I create a new Windows Form and add my custom control to it. I save the Form and close it.
Then I try to open the form and get the following error: Object of type 'MyTestApplication.SerializablePanel[]' cannot be converted to type 'MyTestApplication.SerializablePanel[]'.
I don't know what I'm doing wrong? I've opened the XML file to see what it's actually writing, and read the header notes about using binary base64 serialization. I think that's what I'm using, but I'm not sure.
Below is the code for the class SerializablePanel:
I have a table with a Int PK column and a name. I want to load them into an object of some sort and return them using Json() ActionResult in MVC 2. I am having a hard time finding a built-in structure that is supported for serialization that keeps a simple key/value structure in tact.
Ultimately I would like to do something like: Function JsonList() As ActionResult Dim Things = New Dictionary(Of Integer, String)
The problem is, having converted from VS 2002 to VS 2008 the designer can't seem to handle the custom controls on "my" (not original designer) app. Any time I try to copy, in particular, the custom derived comboBox control I get this error initially:
Type 'Corporate.Controls.data.comboBox+comboBoxDataSource+Item' in Assembly Corporate.Controls, ... is not marked as serializable.
I chased this error down, marking classes Serializable and private variables therein as NonSerialized when they caused a problem (which might or might not be the smartest way to attack this problem...) but I've hit a brick wall. The most base corporate derived ComboBox class is:
Namespace Corporate.Controls Public Class comboBox Inherits System.Windows.Forms.ComboBox ... End Class
It's unrealistic to post all of the relevant code (I believe). The short of it is:
I just kept backtracking through the errors.At this point I can't set System.Windows.Forms.ComboBox to Serializable. I've tried marking the Inherits System.Windows.Forms.ComboBox clause with <NonSerialized()> and while that doesn't cause a build error it doesn't seem to fix the designer-generated error in the other libraries when I go to actually add, copy or even delete the control in WYSIWYG. And that is the only reference to System.Windows.Forms.ComboBox in that (or any other) corporate library.
I created a website that contains a Webservice that transfers data to a windows application Using a collection, however, I get this Error that says that anything that inherits the ICOllection, it must implement Add(System.Object)
Say I have a interface called IProperties and I have a collection called colMyProperties that is a collection of IProperties. Then I have an object called clsProperty that implements the IProperty interface. Now, in my code where I add objects to the colMyProperties collection I add a bunch of clsProperty objects. so far so good.
Now when I try to access an object in the collection I can only access properties and methods of the IProperties interface, not the clsProperty object. What am I doing wrong? Do I need to cast the object?
I have a form with a tabControl on it. This tabControl has 10 tabs and each tab has multiple textboxes. I am trying to iterate through these textboxes, but cannot find which collection these textboxes belong to within the project.