When I open an ASP.NET 3.5 project using VWD2010, I get a prompt error message,"The connection property in the web.config file is missing or incorrect.The connection string from the .dbml file has been used in its place."however, my project works successfully.
I'm implementing an authentication timeout detection mechanism per a previous question and answer of mine here. I've implemented an HTTP module that uses the AuthenticateRequest event to run code to capture whether the authentication period has expired. The code to do this is below:
public class AuthenticationModule : IHttpModule { #region IHttpModule Members void IHttpModule.Dispose() { } void IHttpModule.Init(HttpApplication application)
[Code]....
The problem is that, once the authentication period has expired (I set it to 1 min to test), there is no longer a forms cookie (see comment in code). This means that the authentication cookie will be null, and I won't make it past the null check in my code. But there's a convenient "Expired" property for a FormsAuthenticationTicket that I feel like I should be checking to see if the period is expired. But how do I get that far if the cookie is no longer there? Is it reasonable to assume the authentication period has expired if there's no longer a forms cookie?
The user control has public properties named accordingly and the page has protected properties accordingly which I've verified have the desired values.
For some reason the values are always empty strings or 0s in the usercontrol, no matter what the page property is.
Can anyone add a complete input about how to create Parent Property with multiple child properties or in short nested properties.
Example: Style tag: which has properties like font, color, display... etc? which accept objects and its value.
[code]....
As soon as Rainbow property is typed, user should get intellisense for list of number of colors. Then accordingly user can select list of those colors and assign a value to them.
Is there any difference between accessing a property that has a backing field
private int _id; public int Id { get { return _id; } set { _id = value; } }
versus an auto-property?
public int Id { get; set; }
The reason I'm asking is that when letting ReSharper convert a property into an auto property it seems to scan my entire solution, or at least all aspx-files.
I can't see any reason why there should be any difference between the two from outside the class. Is there?
<asp:sqldatasource id="DS" runat="server" connectionstring="<%$ ConnectionStrings:MY_CONNECTION %>" Selectcommand ="Select * from [10.10.10.10].dd.dbo.table"> The connection string is taken from web.config.
I want to take a value from the web.config -> app settings via asp tag.
The reason is that inside the selectcommand inside the sqldatasource I use four-part-name and the IP is hard coded in some aspx files.
I want it to be taken from appsettings property instead.
I need to set a style property of an element to the value returned from a code-behind property. I have done this in the past, but it now seems everything I try fails. I get an error telling me that the literal is not formed correctly.These are some of the arrangements I have tried:
Can we write property in property?IN the page load event we have page property and we can find another page property in that page property.Pls let me know how this is happening
I have a testproject and the forms timeout specified in web.config overrules the timeout which I set in FormsAuthenticationTicket. According the documentation, the timeout (expire date) in FormsAuthenticationTicket must override the timeout in web.config.
Documentation found on:
[URL]
[Code]....
Here is my code:
Web.config:
[Code]....
Login.aspc.cs:
[Code]....
Now, when I login, i get redirected after 1 minute of inactivity. This isn't supposed to happen, right? I have to be redirected after 2 minutes.
I have myConnectionString and it's working fine. In the Server Explorer, the Data Connection is even using myConnectionString to connect to the database. When I created my .dbml, it uses that same yConnectionString. However, now whenever I opened the .dbml file, pops up with the following message:The connection property in the web.config file is missing or incorrect.The connection string from the .dbml file has been used in its place.After this message is display and I clicked okay (because that's the only option), it creates myConnectionString2 in the web.config file with a different ID but no password provided. What is this all about? Why is it creating a second connection string with a different ID?
I have a masterpage that contains all the javascript and inside the content control, there is a link that calls a javascript function and I want to pass the id once it's rendered differently by the server.
<asp:TextBox ID="txtstart" runat="server" Width="20%"></asp:TextBox> <a title="Pick Date from Calendar" onclick="calendarPicker('<% txtstart.ClientId %>');" href="javascript:void(0);">
However, I keep getting this error:
Property access must assign to the property or use its value.
I use the default ASP.NET Profile Provider which lets me define user properties in web.config.
I now no longer want to use one of these user properties. I want to delete all traces of it.
I can remove the property from the list of properties in web.config however, I suspect, the stored values for this property will still be held in the aspnet_Profile table for each user.
Is there an easy way to clean out all traces of the data for a property that's no longer used from the aspnet_Profile table?
I am working with odbcCommand class, in one case I got error that QueryTimeout Expired. Even though this SP is taking only 3-4 secs in DB to execute these specific values, When I set the CommandTimeout=0, then it worked fine.
1)Is it necessary to always use this property while working with Command Class.
2)If it is not suggested to use, but still if I use it then how it will impact the performance.
Below is my code sample.
OdbcConnection conObj; OdbcCommand cmdObj; OdbcDataAdapter daObj = new OdbcDataAdapter(); public DataTable GetIFAContractNoteData(string RecipientIDIFACN, DateTime BatchDateIFACN, int TransmittalReportIDIFACN) { conObj = new OdbcConnection(GlobalVariables.strDsnName + ";" + GlobalVariables.strDsnDataBase + ";" + GlobalVariables.strDsnUserID + ";" + GlobalVariables.strDsnPassword);
i get a list of objects from the Entity Framework data context.
var list = context.EntityA;
the EntityA is the main object (contains the primary key), but has a navigation property called "EntityALanguages", which contains language specific properties.
now i want to bind the list to a dropdownlist and need so set DataValueField and DataTextField properties from the dropdownlist.
how can i set the DataTextField to a property of a navigation property, something like:
I have a type that is derived from an Entity generated by the Entity Framework 3. How do I assign one Customer's Order property to the Derived Customer's Order property?
derivedCustomer.Orders = customer.Orders
I'm not actually trying to swap orders; this is just an example of what I am trying to achieve. Has anyone done tried this and succeed?
Traditionally with an Object Data Source, the wired up class will have its public properties available for binding (i.e. Gridview columns, etc.) which works well. But what if one of my wired up business objects has a property that is an object itself; can I drill down to a property on that object property and still use it?
So in additiona to the traditional:MyBusniessObject.OrderID...I want to use:MyBusniessObject.Customer.NameID Your 1st response might be to just wire up the 'Customer' class, but I need properties both on 'MyBusinessObject'and 'Customer'. I do not think this can be done, as the ODS will not display properties on an object instance property. I have tried manually typing in the drilled down value as well, but that wasn't a success either.
my web application i use FindControl to retrieve a Control By Name (it returns an System.Web.UI object). The control can be of various type and I don't want to treat them differently: I'd like to set the Text property to a defined string. I hope there's a class that I may use to cast the control and set the Text property.
'Person' is not a member of type 'Transient.rowtype[(Id,Edm.Int32(Nullable=True,DefaultValue=))]' in the currently loaded schemas.
Does the EntityDataSource not support walking the relationships? How would you do this with the EntityDataSource?
Also the @userName parameter is being added in the code behind for now. Extra points for anyone who knows how to specify a username parameter directly in the WhereParameters collection.