Unable To Set ReaderQuotas For BasicHttpBinding Generated In Code
Jul 12, 2011
I have a project with requirements to generate a single executable file with no dependencies that will automate the submission of data to a WCF service based on command line parameters passed to it. As a result, I cannot configure the WCF binding and quotas in an App.config file, so I am generating a BasicHttpBinding in code to use when dimensioning the WCF client object.
However, the WCF service accepts the binary data for a relatively small Excel spreadsheet that ends up being around 30kb, so the default configuration settings for the binding's ReaderQuotas are inadequate. My attempts to increase them in code to 1MB, however, have met with failure each time I make a call to the service.[code]...
I am new to web development and WCF. I am tasked to create a WCF application/service that can be accessed by other technologies as well. Thus I ended up with BasicHttpBinding. I will have a XML parameter. Here is my code:
<OperationContract()> _ <WebInvoke(Method:="POST", UriTemplate:="")> _ Function ReceiveMessage( _
I have an asp.net web forms application. In this application, students upload assignments and submit a survey along with it. For the survey, I read values from DB and dynamically generate ASP.NET Controls like radiobuttonlist, checkboxlist, textbox on the form during gridview's RowDataBound Event. I cannot do it in Page_Init method because I create only if a user click on a specific assignment which requires a survey to be submitted.
When I submit the survey form, the survey values are not saved into database. During debugging I figured it out that the values are not available in the codebehind page. The radiobuttonlist.selectedvalue returns and I get following error[code]....
I know that when I add things to the designer in Visual Studio, it has to be generating code for them somewhere. Where do I find the code that Visual Studio creates when I add controls, change properties, etc in the designer?
I already made a code on vb.net to generate random numbers with letters using HEXA + date time. Now, all i want to know is how to set it to single use? Once they got it, they can no longer use it back. They have to request for new one..
but it's something I'm pretty consistently needing for the sake of my own sanity, so:If you add a Settings file to any project in Visual Studio, VS provides a GUI making it quick/easy to add a new Setting entry and assign it a Type; at that point the actual code-behind is automagically created with a variable and a property exposing that variable.Can we build our own designers to generate code this way, with a GUI allowing for those quick/easy variable/property assignments?
I created a custom datagridview. In the constructor of that datagridview, I set
Me.AutoGenerateColumns = False
and then, declared and added 4 DatagridViewImageColumns and 140
DatagridViewTextBoxColumns by the code ... Dim dvgCol as New DataGridViewImageColumn
[code]....
But when I add an instance of that datagridview onto a form, in the form.design.vb there are many code defines for each columns and then sometimes adds additional code to create those columns again. Sometime when I delete the datagridview control in the form,that code is not deleted.
I'm trying to make alterations to an existing project, and I've found a project in the solution which is full of generated classes.Problem is, nobody here can tell me what generated them, so I'm pretty much left with pasting one of the classes in here and hoping someone will be able to tell me where they came from.
The solution I'm working on uses Expression Blend 3 and Visual Studio 2008. Dunno if that's relevant, but I'm trying to give as much information as I can think of... As well as this class, which appears in its own file, there's an "SPResults" file, which contains about 5000 lines of accessor classes of this type. Not quite sure why EndCustomer is in its own file...
From what I can see for myself, there's a stored procedure in one of the databases this program links to, and that SP's name is "GetEndCustomers". Something has then created a class called "EndCustomers" to represent the return type of this procedure.
The first part is a function from a class named Database, which returns a collection of the objects in question.
<FunctionAttribute(Name:="dbo.GetEndCustomers")> _ Public Function GetEndCustomers(<Parameter(Name:="Dummy", DbType:="VarChar(1)")> ByVal Dummy As String) As ISingleResult(Of Data.EndCustomer) Dim result As IExecuteResult = Me.ExecuteMethodCall(Me, CType(MethodInfo.GetCurrentMethod, MethodInfo), Dummy)
[Code]...
So, yeah, can anyone tell me what has been used to generate this class? It could be something in Visual Studio, Expression Blend, SQL Server Management Studio, or some obscure bit of software I haven't even noticed is on the PC. Any clues, anyone?
I want to get a part of the text a webpage, but when i get the source code using a webclient it gives me a javascript on the place where the text I want is. This javascript generates a lot of text, but how I can I let my program get this text? BTW if I select the text in Firefox and right-click view source code then I see the source of the text, but not when I just view source code of the whole page.[code]....
I'm having a problem using XML literals with a StringBuilder in VB 2008. If I use this code everything is fine.Dim html As New System.Text.StringBuilder
I moved from SubSonic 2.x to 3.0 and noticed that all my classes are combined into the ActiveRecord.vb(cs) file. Is there a way to have my classes generated individually in a separate folder (DAL) as I was doing with 2.x?
I have started with a small project in VB2008 Express which grew to a complex application. I have deployed the application recently discovering it is rather small, and the major issue is that code-generated controls (checkboxes, comboboxes, textboxes) are not displayed as during development. I have declared the code-generated controls in the declaration region, and there are about 250 controls. According to user selection some of the controls are added to a container panel. Now, I am concern that because I declare those as public (static?) variables, it uses much memory and causes the problem in the compiled application. Is that correct that static declared and code-generated controls uses much memory? How to avoid it ? I need the controls as public variables. Is it better to add all 250 controls on the form in designer mode, and use the property Visible (control.visible=True)?
Is there a way to remove items in code generated in Codedom from VB code?
For example at the top of all the code I generate, it has:
[Code]...
I'd like both of these to go away - the commented text and the both the Option xxx. I've tried toying around with CodeGeneratorOptions, but have not been able to remove the above from generated code.
I created a vb.net script to autogenerate a code. Now, after generating this code, what I want is to determine the validity of this code. for example, a code has been generated now and this code will be valid for 24 hours only. Can someone help me how to do this? i have no idea as of this moment. Been searching over google and dont know what's the right keyword for that.. Below is my script for the auto generation code
Dim randomvalue As New Random Dim randomhold As Integer Dim newcode As Long
I am new to vb.net. I created a vb.net script to autogenerate a code. Now, after generating this code, what I want is to determine the validity of this code. for example, a code has been generated now and this code will be valid for 24 hours only.
Below is my script for the auto generation code Dim randomvalue As New Random Dim randomhold As Integer Dim newcode As Long For i As Integer = 0 To 9999 randomhold = randomvalue.Next(1, 9999) newcode = randomhold & DateTime.Now.Minute & DateTime.Now.Year Label3.Text = newcode Next The code generated will be sent via sms. If the code hasn't used within 24 hours, it will be invalid.
I've written a for loop to generate several new text boxes and numericUpDowns when the application is run.
The text boxes / numericUpDowns are generated with a 2-dimensional array. My question is: How do I handle when the text boxes / numericUpDowns are modified?
If you would like the code, just request it and I'll add it here.
This is my first post. I have just started some serious .NET programming. Can anyone help me understand what is a good, industry standard in developing the VB.NET or ASP.NET applications? Should we use the Automatically generated code by the VStudio or we should be coding manually i.e. handling the datasets, populating the controls etc instead of using the automatic generated code using wizards.
Most of my project was imported from an older version of VB (now I'm using 2008). All of the forms had a "Windows Form Designer Generated Code" that I could expand at the top of the form's code. When I created a new form, that was not there, and I found out that in the solution explorer you can "view all files" and expand the form and look at MyForm.Designer and that has the same type of instantiation code. My question is, is there some way to update the old ones so they too do not have that "form designer generated code" at the top?
I've got a form with a TabControl. PictureBoxes (containing thumbnails) are added to each TabPage thru a loop. A click event Handler is added for each PictureBox. When a PictureBox is clicked, a new form is created thru code and a PictureBox is added to it that shows the pictures enlarged. What I need is to add another Handler to the PictureBox in the code-generated form so that I can rotate the pictures because some of them (photographs) were taken with the camera at 90 degree angles from vertical. I've tried to come up with a solution but I always run into the problem of the PictureBox on the code-generated form needing to be declared WithEvents before a Handler can be added.
Code for adding PictureBoxes to TabControl: 'Variable p declared public withevents at class level p = New PictureBox img = Image.FromFile(Path.GetFullPath(picfile))
I use the code about video capture of this site, it ran very well ! VB Helper: HowTo: Capture video from a video device such as a Webcam with VB .NET But I want to change the interface of form then after I customize my new one with button, picturebox (with the right name), copy the code again except this paragraph #Region " Windows Form Designer generated code "
So I've created a very simple UserControl that is pretty much just a combo box that has US States in it and a couple properties to return the selected value as an enumeration or a string, etc.The enumeration and string values I'm using are being referenced from an external library which is working. However, when I add my user control to another project the designer-generated code has errors in it. [code] I would assume that this probably has something to do with project settings or something similar for the user control. The control itself is in a separate project and compiled as a .dll which has been added to my main project's toolbox and subsequently added to my form. [code]
In the early generations of VB.NET visual studio, I used to see an automatically generated region named "Windows Form Designer generated code" that includes the code that generates the controls at the surface of a form. But what happened with VS 2008, I can't see that region any more ? Where are the lines of code that are automatically generated that create controls and set there properties ????? Luai Alrantisi, BSc in Computer Engineering, University of Ottawa 2007, Canada. IT Manager of MTN Mobile Telecom.