Okay, now I have to go help clean up here. Then, I am going to try to open VS2010 on my desktop (with a dusty keyboard) and get a little client running.
If you're writing a Windows Forms client application (not a ASP.NET server-side component), showing the progress of a WebClient download can be done as follows:
WebClient webClient = new WebClient();
webClient.DownloadProgressChanged += (s, e) =>
{
progressBar.Value = e.ProgressPercentage...
So that code is basically adding those two simple anonymous functions (specifically, lambda expressions) to the event handler list for those specific events.
What happens when I make a request with a WebClient object when the computer is offline? Is there a way to detect that beforehand. or should I be handling some sort of exception?
@Moshe I think that you need to use delegates. There's an example of consuming events on MSDN. As far as making requests when offline goes, you should get a WebException or something I think.
Interesting. Apparently, "the first dictionaries were glossaries of Homeric words, intended to help Romans read the Illiad and Odyssey as well as other Greek literature..."
I have thesis theme but for that thesis I want to create a child theme but I am not find out any help for starting. even i have search on Internet but nothing found Hey any body have any idea regard this then please help me. I am waiting for your reply
Thanks
I like languages. German pronunciations are tricky. Being Jewish, I can pronounce "ch", but there are two pronunciations of that apparently and it's confusing.
Yeah, the keyboard takes some time! It's almost right, but I have so little linguistic knowledge to explain it in the right words. It has to be in dem iPhone. That's the.... thingamagic... accusative? Indicative? One of them :)
It's "in dem" for neutrals, "in der" for the feminine form (like "In der Pflanze", in the (feminine) plant),
and again "in dem" for the masculine, like "In dem Regen" (In the [masculine] rain).
@Moshe :) There is a "high German" that is standard diction which comes originally from the region around Hanover. Everything else is dialects, but standard german dominates in public life.
@Moshe exactly, that's the standard. It's written "Hochdeutsch" (Our tendency to glue together words is another perk you will be introduced to in your studies :)
Should you use the train and somehow wash ashore in Cologne on your way there with a longer stopover, let me know! We can have a beer somewhere near the station.
As you can see, the sidebar features Meta, then the ad, then the chat ad, then Meta again, then the ad again, then the chat ad again (which fails to load), then finally related questions (once):
Props to GnomeSlice for noticing this first.