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Showing posts with label windows application. Show all posts
Showing posts with label windows application. Show all posts

Nov 7, 2012

Using Settings in C#

Introduction

The .NET Framework 2.0 allows you to create and access values that are persisted between application execution sessions. These values are called settings. Settings can represent user preferences, or valuable information the application needs to use. For example, you might create a series of settings that store user preferences for the color scheme of an application. Or you might store the connection string that specifies a database that your application uses. Settings allow you to both persist information that is critical to the application outside of the code, and to create profiles that store the preferences of individual users.

While Visual Basic 2005 has provided an easily discoverable mechanism for accessing settings using the My namespace, there is no analogous namespace in Visual C# 2005, and thus settings are somewhat more difficult to access. Nonetheless, C# users can still use settings by accessing the Properties namespace. In the course of this article, you will learn the difference between application and user settings, how to create new settings at design time, how to access settings at run time, and even how to incorporate multiple sets of settings into your application.

Nov 5, 2012

How to create a countdown timer application using C# and WinForms

In this tutorial I will explain how to create a countdown application in C#. For this application I did not declare any additional namespaces.

StatusBar in c# Windows Application

StatusBar Example

using System;
using System.Drawing;
using System.Collections;
using System.ComponentModel;
using System.Windows.Forms;
using System.Data;

namespace StatusBarExample
{
  /// <summary>
  /// Summary description for StatusBarExample.
  /// </summary>
  public class StatusBarExample : System.Windows.Forms.Form
  {
    internal System.Windows.Forms.StatusBar statusBar;
    /// <summary>
    /// Required designer variable.
    /// </summary>
    private System.ComponentModel.Container components = null;

    public StatusBarExample()
    {
      //
      // Required for Windows Form Designer support
      //
      InitializeComponent();

      //
      // TODO: Add any constructor code after InitializeComponent call
      //
    }

    /// <summary>
    /// Clean up any resources being used.
    /// </summary>
    protected override void Dispose( bool disposing )
    {
      if( disposing )
      {
        if (components != null)
        {
          components.Dispose();
        }
      }
      base.Dispose( disposing );
    }

    #region Windows Form Designer generated code
    /// <summary>
    /// Required method for Designer support - do not modify
    /// the contents of this method with the code editor.
    /// </summary>
    private void InitializeComponent()
    {
      this.statusBar = new System.Windows.Forms.StatusBar();
      this.SuspendLayout();
      //
      // statusBar
      //
      this.statusBar.Location = new System.Drawing.Point(0, 138);
      this.statusBar.Name = "statusBar";
      this.statusBar.ShowPanels = true;
      this.statusBar.Size = new System.Drawing.Size(292, 24);
      this.statusBar.SizingGrip = false;
      this.statusBar.TabIndex = 1;
      //
      // StatusBarExample
      //
      this.AutoScaleBaseSize = new System.Drawing.Size(5, 14);
      this.ClientSize = new System.Drawing.Size(292, 162);
      this.Controls.AddRange(new System.Windows.Forms.Control[] {
                                      this.statusBar});
      this.Font = new System.Drawing.Font("Tahoma", 8.25F, System.Drawing.FontStyle.Regular, System.Drawing.GraphicsUnit.Point, ((System.Byte)(0)));
      this.Name = "StatusBarExample";
      this.Text = "StatusBar Example";
      this.Load += new System.EventHandler(this.StatusBarExample_Load);
      this.ResumeLayout(false);

    }
    #endregion

    /// <summary>
    /// The main entry point for the application.
    /// </summary>
    [STAThread]
    static void Main()
    {
      Application.Run(new StatusBarExample());
    }

    private void StatusBarExample_Load(object sender, System.EventArgs e)
    {
      StatusBarPanel pnlStatus = new StatusBarPanel();
      pnlStatus.Text = "Ready";
      pnlStatus.Icon = new Icon(Application.StartupPath + "\\active.ico");
      pnlStatus.AutoSize = StatusBarPanelAutoSize.Contents;

      StatusBarPanel pnlConnection = new StatusBarPanel();
      pnlConnection.Text = "Connected to " + "localhost";
      pnlConnection.AutoSize = StatusBarPanelAutoSize.Spring;

      statusBar.Panels.Add(pnlStatus);
      statusBar.Panels.Add(pnlConnection);

    }
  }
}

Oct 29, 2012

Progressive Clock in C# windows Application

Introduction

The dialog box on this exercise displays three progress bars: one holds the value of the current hour, another holds the value of the minutes in the current hour, the last displays the seconds of the current minute. We also use a label on the right side of each progress bar to display its corresponding value.

Oct 27, 2012

Combobox in c# windows application

This example explains How To Create Cascading ComboBox Dependent On One Another In WinForms Windows Forms Applications Using C# And VB.Net.

I have used Country, State, City tables from database to populate respective cascading combobox based on selection of country and state.

Drag 3 combobox controls from toolbar on the windows form, write following code to populate comboboxes.

Table schemas are shown below.



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