It would be handy during debugging to have multiple consoles (not multiple monitors, which I already have). I am imagining something like Console.WriteLine(1, String1) which would send String1 to one console window 1 and Console.WriteLine(2, String2) which would send String2 to console window 2.
i've been doing research about this for a while now. I'm pretty sure it's correct, but the console.writeline is not providing any messeges when program is executed. Im using Visual Studio 2010 pro. Is there anything im missing or doing wrong? Here's what i have:
Console.WriteLine("Network adapter: {0}", adapters[i].Name); Console.WriteLine("Status: {0}", adapters[i].OperationalStatus.ToString()); Console.WriteLine("Interface: {0}", adapters[i].NetworkInterfaceType.ToString()); [Code] ..... What I want is to have this Console.WriteLine displayed in a text box on the form but how to do it.
I have declared my variables As Decimal, and what I am struggling to do is to display these values to 2 decimal places in such a way so that they both appear on the same line of output. Here is the guts of the problem (noting I have two different versions of Console.Writeline...the second one does display on one line, but without two decimal places).
Why vb prints out 1??? when d is a double aproximation to 1? shoudnt be 0.99999 or something similar? what if I really need the float value? and how could I print it?
I'm working on a console application that needs to write a line until a certain value is met and than do the same backwards until another value is met.
The line need to be 51 spaces wide, start and end with the pipe ("|") character and have a cross ("X") character in between.
I'm an absolute newb to vb (less than a week) and I'm trying to convert a console app to a windows form.In the console app, I have this code
Public Sub rconPacketReceive(ByVal fromserver As Boolean, ByVal isresponse As Boolean, ByVal seq As Integer, ByVal words() As String) Handles rconObj.packetIncoming Dim w As String = Nothing For Each word In words
[code]....
What I want is to have this Console.WriteLine displayed in a text box on the form but don't have any idea on how to do it.
i wanted to display the values of my code on a message box in multiple lines..that is,, i have x and y and z values that i have calculated and want them to be on a message box
I am in a programming class, and am one of the best students in it, I even went to a state programming contest. One of the problems was to enter 6 race times and have it display the times back in order of which were fastest and their place such as
come years ago I bought an activex component to read some basic smartcard data. I created a simple form application and it has worked fine ever since. However, instate of a form application I now want to create a console application for the same purpose (the forms are unrequired and it just takes too long with multiple smartcards).
But I have been working on this for days now and somehow can't seem to get my events working. When I use 1 event, everything works fine, but as soon as I add my second event I get this error:
Unhandled Exception: System.Runtime.InteropServices.COMException (0x80040202): E xception from HRESULT: 0x80040202 at System.Runtime.InteropServices.ComTypes.IConnectionPoint.Advise(Object pUn kSink, Int32& pdwCookie)
I was thinking of adding a simple bandwidth monitor to a console application and I was wondering if it would be possible to keep a line in the console window visible at all times. I could set something up manually to pass new console output into a method that would get the contents of the console, clear the console, add the bandwidth data on the first row, then rewrite each line of previous information back to the console, etc.. but that seems like a really hacky way to go about it, and I'd be limited to the amount of rows visible at once in the console window (no scrolling).
STATS: Downloaded: 2599b, Uploaded: 754b <- this always stays at the top constantly changing text constantly changing text constantly changing text
In the past, perhaps versions of Visual Studio prior to the 2008 that I am using now, I would do something like this in my VB.NET code:System.Diagnostics.Debug.WriteLine("Message")
and the output would go to the output window.Now it doesn't. Something must first apparently be enabled.
If this involves "attaching a debugger", please explain how to do it. It seems to me that it should just work without too much of a fuss.Here's a video explaining the issue in real time and showing you all my settings[URL]..
I probably have something misdeclared but can't find it. I'm trying to open a file to write data into and the last line in the code below gives the message "WritiLine is not a Member of ScriptingFileSystem.Object". I have something similar in another module that works. Maybe I don't have the inheritance correct? This is from VB 2005.
Here is the code
Module TCALpage '////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// '// Variables for creating/opening the output file.
I have been searching for a way to format output using writeline/write (streamwriter)using RTF tags and wondering if there is a syntax for this, if it exists. I have not been able to find a resource which clearly explains how to "pretty" up output sent to a file.
The reason why I am asking is because I want to "print" results from my program into a file that, at the very least, would be centered, tabbed and even bolded where possible without requiring the user to go and futz with it. I think I saw that Crystal Reports won't work with VB 2010 Express and, quite frankly, just want to create a file with output.
sw.WriteLine("attributes") For i = 0 To noatts - 1 sw.WriteLine(attName(i)) Next
This is creating weird results though.
[Code]...
Anyone know why could that be? In other parts of the file writeline works well. It only creates extra lines on that specific section. Btw: the file looks good if viewing by notepad, the extra lines appear when viewing in wordpad. Apparently that matters because when I reuse that file to read some values in my program, it crashes cause it reads those empty lines instead of the attributes.
If I have Debug.WriteLine method in my code, do I need to comment all these methods before producing the Release version? Or does the compiler just ignore them?
I have a fairly large program with lots of forms, but just one of the forms is giving me this error: "'writeline' is not a member of 'Boolean'" Here is the code that seems relevant:
I have a console application I'm using to run scheduled jobs through windows scheduler. All the communication to/from the application is in email, event logging, database logs. Is there any way I can suppress the console window from coming up?
so I am making a program that will run a server for a game. I've programmed a console into the form and it works but it only works until it is finished reading the slandered output.
When the form load I needed to create a text file into "C:\Program Files\User\User.text" But if the file exist it will read line1, line 2 and line3 of the text in different textboxes Then if I click save, it will write textbox 1 to line 1, textbox2 to line 2 and textbox3 to line 3.How do I do it?
I have a fellow employee who is learning Visual Basic and in one of her assignments she is using the debug.writeline statement. Example: Private Sub Form1_Load(ByVal sender As System.Object, ByVal e As System.EventArgs) Handles MyBase.Load Debug.WriteLine("This line always prints") End Sub When you run the program, nothing prints to the Output window. I have tried it in VS2008 and VS2010. Brian Allison
I have a vb.net application that uses threads to asynchronously process some tasks in a "Scheduled Task" (console application).We are limiting this app to run 10 threads at once, like so:
(pseudo-code)
- create a generic list of 10 threads
- spawn off the threadproc for each one
- do a thread.join statement for each thread to wait for the longest running one to complete.
What i am finding is that if the code called by the threadproc contains any "Debug.Writeline" or "Trace.Traceinformation" statements, the thread hangs. I can see the thread in the Debug - Windows - Threads window, and switch to it, but it highlights the debug.writeline statement and never gets past it. is there something special about the Debug or Trace statements that make them non-thread-safe? Any idea why this would hang things up? If I leave the debug statement in, the thread never completes. If I take the debug statement out, the thread completes in less than 5 seconds.
This may be more of an OOP concept question, but here's what I'd like to do.I have an application that outputs debug information using System.Diagnostics.Trace.WriteLine so it can be viewed with DebugView.I'd like to override/extend (not sure of the proper terminology) this method to log the text to a file instead, or maybe in addition to the Trace output. This would allow me to write a new WriteLine method for my app, and I could leave all my other System.Diagnostics.Trace.WriteLine statements unchanged throughout the rest of the application.?