I am trying to work out an example from ".NET Domain Driven Design with C#", which contains a code example where you can see declared some attributes of type DelegateCommand. Now, I've tried googling it up, but I can't find its reference anywhere on MSDN (actually, I found this article, but not DelegateCommand's article itself). Is the DelegateCommand something that's part of WPF or is it just something created in the book?
I need to read an xml document from a database record into an XDocument object in order for it to be deserialized. So that the deserialization will work, I need to apply a specific namespace to each of the level 1 elements. So XML looks a bit like this:
[Code]...
How do I prevent the blank/empty namespace being added to each child element of the element to which the required namespace has been applied?
This class is located in the namespace Acme.Infrastructure.Interface.A class with the same name EventArgs exists in the System namespace.In another project in my solution I have a class Acme.BusinessModules.MyModule.MyClass.When attempting to use the EventArgs class I have to fully qualify the class name or the compiler thinks I am using the System.EventArgs class.My understanding of namespace resolution was that the compiler would first look for the class in the current namespace, and then its parents. It seems that the compiler checks in System before it checks in sibling namespaces. Is it correct that System is checked before the sibling? Or is this behaviour caused by other issues (Imports order?)?
As I say, I've got an application which I'll refer to as "AppName" (note the upper case 'A' and 'N') which, for example, attempts to reference "My.Application.Info.ProductName". Adding a breakpoint and putting a QuickWatch on that call shows the error:
I've been developing a Vb.Net app lately, and I'm trying to make it as lightweight as possible (ie make the binaries as small as possible).I've done all the trivial stuff, but while browsing the binary with ILDasm, I noticed that it has a My namespace, with a lot of methods, although I don't use any of these in my program. It seems that there are default Get/Set methods for every form, and other methods.Or, can you show me a use case for the methods bundled by default in the binary? PS: I guess it's not going to make a huge difference in binary size: I'm just asking this out of curiosity; why would the compiler bundle useless methods in every binaries? Perhaps I'll learn that these methods are actually used somewhere under the hood.
Using VB.net, I have a namespace which I'd like to rename for the future. However, I'd also like to keep the old obsolete namespace for a time to ensure backward-compatibility for our consumers for awhile. Is there a way in .NET to have two namespaces, one ordinary and one that merely is an alternative name for the other?
I'm trying to add the Compatibility.VB6 namespace in some of my VB.NET Programs (using 1.1 framework, 2003). It was added in one of my programs because of a migration wizard but i can only use these commands in that particular program. How would I add that to the others?
I'm currently maintaining some old code for a company. As it would happen, the current app I'm modifying uses an older version of the in-house library (we'll call this Lib1.dll). They also have a new version of the library called Lib2.dll that improves upon the previous library in many ways.
Unfortunately, Lib2 is not backward compatible with Lib1. What's worse is that they both use the same namespace Product.Common.
How do I use Lib2 and Lib1 in the same project? Right now if I add references to both of them, VS tells me that certain classes are ambiguous (which makes sense, since they using the same namespace).
What should go into the top level namespace? For example, if I have MyAPI.WebLogic,MyAPI.Compression, etc. If I put classes into the top level namespace, am I violating the principle of encapsulation?
I've googled for creation of namespaces and found some very useful examples, what these examples didn't have is how do I compile and implement my created namespace on my system so I can include it from my various applications.So for example, if I create a namespace to load a config file from my application path and insert it to an array, Do i need to include the namespace on any project I use or is there a way to make it part of my environment?
But when I come to do a test project to test my service, no namespace does not appear, and put my two classes are the same. The Intellisence going to my first class with the name Reply, and the second class with the name Reply1, while I wanted the same hierarchy with my classes. So I wonder if it is possible to do? I look forward to your responses.
I want to define WebControls from VB code. I add a reference to System.Web.dll and I use VS2005. My code below gives me the errors:ype 'RadioButtonList' is not defined.Type 'UpdatePanel' is not defined.
Imports System.Web Dim radiobtnlist As RadioButtonList
I'm trying to set up a .NET 3.5 web service project in Visual Studio. My goal is to include a namespace in this web service that I can expose to web applications that references this web service.I have added the namespace "MyWebservices", but I am not able to find it after referencing the web service.[code]I have also attempted to modify the "Root Namespace" property of the web service project, but I can't get that to work for me either.
I have modified the MSDN example to reflect my problem. When using a namespace I can't get the document to validate as I would expect and when validating a document that doesnt have a namespace it validates regardless of whether or not it has an error in it or not.
Dim errors As Boolean = False
Private Sub XSDErrors(ByVal o As Object, ByVal e As ValidationEventArgs) Console.WriteLine("{0}", e.Message) errors = True End Sub
I've added a new class1.vb file to my vb.net project containing:
Namespace MyFunc1 Public Class MyFunc2 Public Function Add(ByVal n1 As Int16, ByVal n2 As Int16) As Int16 return n1 + n2 ' Edited from: "Add = n1 + n2" (same thing)
[code]....
In form1.vb I thought I used to be able to call my functions with:
n = MyFunc1.Add(15, 16)
The error says "it's not a member".These also don't work as expected:
n = MyFunc2.Add(15, 16) n = MyFunc1.MyFunc2.Add(15, 16) n = Add(15, 16)
I have a public class element from another namespace, called A, that I want to access and use in another namespace, called B. Namespace A and B are in different directories but are a part of the same project and solution. I try using the imports statement and referencing the class itself directly but it doesn't find it. Does anyone know what's wrong?
how can i add a method to the debug namespace in vb2008?i've seen some examples of extension methods but they all extend strings.what i want is to add a .clear method, to the debug namespace.i've got the code that clears the immediate window, but i'm unsure how to add an extension.
I'm using VB 2008 and I'm trying to add a xmlns="mynamespace" attribute to an XDocument's root element.The XML document is created by a 3rd party, and I have loaded it into a VB XDocument object. As it comes, it has no namespaces. I have been working on a local copy and I added in a namespace in a text editor, so that I can use the XMLToSchema in VB to enable intellisense etc, as per the instructions in the Beth Massi vids at MSDN. Now the rest of the code works I want to open the live documents again. Without the namespace, my XML literals don't resolve.I've tried unsuccessfully to add in the XMLNS property to the root tag using a few methods, and the nearest I got was the following three code samples.
Dim myNS As XNamespace = "urn:nbf:namespacename" myXML.Element("nameofrootelement").Add(myNS)
^^^^ The namespace was added as the value of the root element, not as an attribute.
XML.Root.Add(New XAttribute("xmlns", "name"))
^^^^ Generated the error: Run-time exception thrown : System.Xml.XmlException - The prefix '' cannot be redefined from '' to 'name' within the same start element tag.
but
XML.Root.Add(New XAttribute("test", "name"))
^^^^ works correctly. Presumably it doesn't like me manually trying to set a reserved attribute? This namespacing seems way too over complex from some of the Googling I've done.I thought to .ToString it, then modify, then .Parse it also, but I wanted a better solution so that it would help me understand it a little better! I did try this though, and as you rightly point out, it affects all the descendants too, so thus it still breaks.
I will be working with multiple XML feeds all produced by different third parties, and I think for simplicity I will be leaving out the namespacing entirely!My own custom parsing function rewrites the third party feeds into one uniformed document, which then gets processed by another routine. I'll be able to add a ns to that intermediate piece of XML which will help when coding the secondary function.
I'm writing a piece of software that accepts XML from our clients. The xml has2 parts, a standard part that contains set fields, and a freeform part that allows our clients to add own their own xml
I know this is probably a simple question but, I have a ASP.NET WebSite not WebApplication and I'm trying to get all of my Web User Controls under the same namespace so that I can register them once inside the web.config file and be done with it. My Question is, How do I do this (put them all under the same namespace and make it the default namespace for that folder)?