Contents tagged with C#
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Solution 6 : Kill a Non-Clustered Process during Two-Node Cluster Failover
Using Visual Studio 2008 and C#, I developed a windows service A and deployed it to two nodes of a windows server 2008 failover cluster. The service A is part of the failover cluster service, which means, when failover occurs at node1, the cluster service will failover the windows service A from node 1 to node 2.
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Tip 16 : Open Multiple Documents within Single Application Instance Using C#
1. Using Microsoft Word 2007 as an example, you can open test1.docx and test2.docx at same time. The two documents are opened within single instance of the word application. World application supports command line argument of passing multiple documents.
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Tip 14 : Solve SmtpClient issues of delayed email and high CPU usage
1. It is quite straightforward using SmtpClient class to send out an email
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Tip 13 : Kill a process using C#, from local to remote
1. My first choice is always to try System.Diagnostics to kill a process
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Architect 3 : Building Data Access Layer Using Microsoft Enterprise Library 4.1
You have a Customer table with three fields: ID, LastName and FirstName. You are building a data access layer to retrieve all the records from the Customer table and return the result as a collection of Customer objects. You want implement it using Microsoft Enterprise Library.
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Solution 5 : Implementing Optional Parameters in T-SQL Stored Procedures
You have a stored procedure GetCustomers with two parameters: LastName, FirstName. The stored procedure returns all the records matching the values of the parameters. You want the parameters be optional, which means skipping the parameter if you do not pass a value.
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Tip 10 : Returning the first part of a string with delimiter
You have a string delimited by underscore such as 1stPart_2ndPart_3rdPart and want to return the first part of the string only.
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Tip 8 : IsDate() function in C#
C# does not provide IsDate() function, but you can build one pretty easily:
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Architect 2 : Calling WCF Services in Your Data Access Layer
After you have completed an N-tier Silverlight application (check my blog: http://weblogs.asp.net/stanleygu/archive/2009/12/20/building-n-tier-silverlight-application.aspx ), your company decides to outsource sql server database development and management to a third party vendor. In your data access layer, instead of calling the sql server database directly, you will need to call the WCF services provided by the vendor.
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Architect 1 : Building N-Tier Silverlight Application
You have a Customer table with fields of LastName and FirstName, and want to use Silverlight DataGrid to display all the records. To implement this, You can use N-tier application architect.