Today I'm playing with localization. I have a winforms app where I've set localizable to true on my screen, then I went and converted all the text to spanish as best as I could. So now I have my screen.resx and my screen.es.resx and everything looks good/bueno. How do I now run my app and have the spanish version come up? I tried going into regional and language options and setting my 'standards and formats' option to spanish. Now my dates are in spanish which is good, but the text on my app is still the english version. How do I get this thing to load with my screen.es.resx?
Did you set your applications Culture/UI Culture to Spanish?
In following code, en-US will be replaced by your UI culture and it will use appropriate resx file depending on the way you have them set up
HTH
System.Globalization.CultureInfo myCI = new System.Globalization.CultureInfo("en-US", false);
System.Threading.Thread.CurrentThread.CurrentUICulture = myCI;
System.Threading.Thread.CurrentThread.CurrentCulture = myCI;
You control which language resource that are used by setting the CurrentUICulture of the current thread. You will most likely also want to set the CurrentCulture (that controls number and date formats and such) (C# code):
// the following using statements must be present
// using System.Threading;
// using System.Globalization;
Thread.CurrentThread.CurrentUICulture = CultureInfo.GetCultureInfo("es-ES");
Thread.CurrentThread.CurrentCulture = Thread.CurrentThread.CurrentUICulture;
For a more detailed discussion on the difference between CurrentUICulture and CurrentCulture, there is a blog post by Michael Kaplan on the topic.
Related
When I've used Settings Designer before, I've been able to browse to find non-standard Types (e.g. uncommon enums etc) to use in my Settings via a "Browse" button at the bottom of the drop down under the "Type" column. I'm developing a WPF desktop application for .net Core and there is no Browse option as pictured below:
I did go into the code behind (Settings.Designer.cs.) and edit the code manually, but on saving, this just reverted to string. I'm guessing this may have something to do with settings also having an element in App.config and I notice it has a "serialiseAs" tag - didn't know what to put here. Exmaple of the code behind settings and App.config:
[global::System.Configuration.UserScopedSettingAttribute()]
[global::System.Diagnostics.DebuggerNonUserCodeAttribute()]
[global::System.Configuration.DefaultSettingValueAttribute("")]
public string UiTheme {
get {
return ((string)(this["UiTheme"]));
}
set {
this["UiTheme"] = value;
}
}
<userSettings>
<GameBoxer.WPF.Properties.Settings>
<setting name="UiTheme" serializeAs="String">
<value />
</setting>
</GameBoxer.WPF.Properties.Settings>
</userSettings>
Does anyone know how to bring back the 'Browse'?? Or, how to correctly do it in code?
I'm using Visual Studio 2022 Community
Thanks
UPDATE: So, I learn that this is "By Design" in VS2022 according to MS here. It's still present in VS2019! But they've taken it out of VS2022 and I can't figure how to do it in code. MS, you're one of my faves out the bunch, but sometimes, you're as mad as a box of frogs. unfortunately that link doesn't provide the poster with any alternatives other than "that's not a bug." Not very helpful, really.
As mentioned in the link you provided, this change was by design due to .NET Core and while I very strongly disagree with their stance on this - I'm assuming this was done because it could be quite fiddly to get your own types to work as expected, especially for new users.
One simple workaround if your custom data has several values, you can use string and simply write your own little parser using delimiters such as ;. You could also use StringCollection to achieve the same result.
Inconvenient, yes. But a simple solution nonetheless.
I sincerely hope Microsoft changes their stance on this and looks at reimplementing this as it worked remarkably well once you figured out the procedure to get it to serialize properly.
Edit:
Figured I might as well provide an example;
// Storing the Settings
// Parameter: Struct { Location(Point), Size(Point), Margin(Thickness) }
var settingString = $"{e.Location.X};{e.Location.Y};{e.Size.X};{e.Size.Y};{e.Margin.Left};{e.Margin.Top};{e.Margin.Right};{e.Margin.Bottom}";
Properties.Settings.Default.MySetting = settingString;
Properties.Settings.Default.Save();
// Parsing the Saved Setting
var settingString = Properties.Settings.Default.MySetting;
if (!String.IsNullOrWhiteSpace(settingString))
{
List<string> splitStrings = settingString.Split(';', StringSplitOptions.RemoveEmptyEntries).ToList();
List<double> parsedValues = new List<double>();
splitStrings.ForEach(x => parsedValues.Add(double.Parse(x)));
var location = new Point(parsedValues[0], parsedValues[1]);
var size = new Point(parsedValues[2], parsedValues[3]);
var margin = new Thickness(parsedValues[4], parsedValues[5], parsedValues[6], parsedValues[7]);
}
There's probably better ways of doing this, but I find this to be a very simple workaround and has worked great thus far.
I have a set of F# record types like this:
type Course =
{ Id : int
Title : string
Instructor : string
Duration : string
StartDate : string
IconUrl : string
Url : string
LectureSections : LectureSection list }
and LectureSection =
{ Title : string
Completed : bool
Lectures : Lecture list }
and Lecture =
{ Title : string
VideoUrl : string }
and at some point I call
sprintf "%A" course
where course is an instance of the Course record
On a regular .NET project this works fine, but on a Windows Phone 7.1 / Silverlight 4 F# project (I'm using Daniel Mohl's templates), I get this error:
Late bound operations cannot be performed on types or methods for which ContainsGenericParameters is true.
The problem seems to be the lists. Does anyone know of any way around this problem?
The templates should come with a custom built FSharp.Core.dll that disable features that are not available on Windows Phone. Are you sure you are compiling against this dll, and not the Windows PC one?
I had similar problems with Xbox360 and XNA. The F# team sent me a dll suitable for use for the Xbox360, along with some brief instructions on the settings used to build the dll.
Here is the propertygroup we've used to compile FSharp.Core:
<PropertyGroup Condition="'$(TargetFramework)'=='Xbox360\CompactFramework\3.7'">
<TargetFrameworkVersion>v4.0</TargetFrameworkVersion>
<TargetFrameworkProfile>Client</TargetFrameworkProfile>
<XnaFrameworkVersion>v4.0</XnaFrameworkVersion>
<XnaPlatform>Xbox 360</XnaPlatform>
<XnaProfile>HiDef</XnaProfile>
<XnaCrossPlatformGroupID>a8d70e6b-9a75-4aec-80f8-62cf373f7368</XnaCrossPlatformGroupID>
<XnaOutputType>Game</XnaOutputType>
<TargetFrameworkVersion>v4.0</TargetFrameworkVersion>
<DefineConstants>$(DefineConstants);FX_NO_ARRAY_LONG_LENGTH;FX_NO_DEBUG_PROXIES;FX_NO_EXIT;FX_FSLIB_IOBSERVABLE;FX_NO_WEB_CLIENT;FX_NO_WEB_REQUESTS;FX_NO_CHAR_PARSE;FX_NO_DEFAULT_DEPENDENCY_TYPE;FX_SIMPLE_SECURITY_PERMISSIONS;FX_NO_TRUNCATE;FX_NO_CULTURE_INFO_ARGS;FX_NO_REFLECTION_MODULE_HANDLES;FX_NO_OPERATION_CANCELLED;FX_NO_TO_LOWER_INVARIANT;FX_NO_EXIT_CONTEXT_FLAGS;FX_NO_BASED_ARRAYS;FX_NO_DOUBLE_BIT_CONVERTER;FX_NO_BINARY_SERIALIZATION;FX_NO_ASCII_ENCODING;FX_NO_DEFAULT_ENCODING;FX_NO_FILE_OPTIONS;FX_NO_NONBLOCK_IO;FX_NO_COMMAND_LINE_ARGS;FX_NO_ENVIRONMENT;FX_NO_PROCESS_START;FX_NO_APP_DOMAINS;FX_NO_PROCESS_DIAGNOSTICS;FX_FSLIB_STRUCTURAL_EQUALITY;FX_FSLIB_LAZY;FX_FSLIB_TUPLE;FX_NO_REFLECTION_EMIT</DefineConstants>
<Tailcalls>false</Tailcalls>
<!-- It would be better to use MSBuild resolution here, but the TargetFrameworkIdentifier etc. aren't set up quite correctly as yet -->
<OtherFlags>$(OtherFlags) --simpleresolution -r:"C:\Program Files\Microsoft XNA\XNA Game Studio\v4.0\References\Xbox360\mscorlib.dll"</OtherFlags>
</PropertyGroup>
and the new .targets we use:
<Import Project="$(MSBuildExtensionsPath)\Microsoft\XNA Game Studio\Microsoft.Xna.GameStudio.targets" Condition="'$(TargetFramework)'=='Xbox360\CompactFramework\3.7'"/>
The dll they sent me was working fine, and I never had to use these instructions, but they might be useful to someone who wants to build an FSharp.Core.dll for a new platform. Note in particular the DefineConstants part.
Is there an easy way to convert HTML to display in the new Windows Phone 7.1 (Mango) RichTextBox control. I'm mostly concerned about retaining links and images without using a web browser control.
thanks,
Sam
I would use HTML Agility pack to parse the HTML and transform each type of node in the equivalent in the Document namespace: http://htmlagilitypack.codeplex.com/
You need to handle the nested elements and depending of the level of conformity of the HTML, handling bad formatted content can be hard but HA is a good library.
There's a sample in the source code I think.
public void ConvertRtfToHtml()
{
System.Windows.Forms.WebBrowser webBrowser =
new System.Windows.Forms.WebBrowser();
webBrowser.CreateControl(); // only if needed
webBrowser.DocumentText = richTextBox1.Text;
while (webBrowser.DocumentText != richTextBox1.Text)
Application.DoEvents();
webBrowser.Document.ExecCommand("SelectAll", false, null);
webBrowser.Document.ExecCommand("Copy", false, null);
richTextBox2.Paste();
}
I am developing an e-commerce administration panel in WPF. I would like to display currency values in PLN (Polish Złoty). Format {0:C} gives output in USD ($1.000). Is there a way to change this behaviour or do I have to write my custom format to accomplish this?
edit:
Why this is so if my windows culture info and location are both set to Polish/Poland?
Try to pass CultureInfo in your String Format.
string money = String.Format(CultureInfo.GetCultureInfo("pl"), "{0:C}", 30.7m);
Console.WriteLine(money);
EDIT: if you are in WPF then this should do the trick:
this.Language = XmlLanguage.GetLanguage("pl");
or
FrameworkElement.LanguageProperty.OverrideMetadata(typeof(FrameworkElement), new FrameworkPropertyMetadata(XmlLanguage.GetLanguage("pl")));
You sholud add only xml:lang="pl-PL" in your <Window> tag in MainWindows.xaml. Simple as that!
I'm working on a data migration task, where I have to export a somewhat large Lotus Notes application into a blogging platform. My first task was to export the articles from Lotus Notes into CSV files.
I created a Agent in LotusScript to export the data into CSV files. I use a modified version of this IBM DeveloperWorks forum post. And it basically does the job. But the contents of the Rich Text field is stripped of any formatting. And this is not what I want, I want the Rich Text field rendered as HTML.
The documentation for the GetItemValue method explicitly states that the text is rendered into plain text. So I began to research for something that would retrieve the HTML. I found the NotesMIMEEntity class and some sample code in the IBM article How To Access HTML in a Rich Text Field Using LotusScript.
But for the technique described in the above article to work, the Rich Text field need to have the property "Store Contents as HTML and MIME". And this is not the case with my Lotus Notes database. I tried to set the property on the fields in question, but it didn't do the trick.
Is it possible to use the NotesMIMEEntity and set the "Store Contents as HTML and MIME" property after the content has been added, to export the field rendered as HTML?
Or what are my options for exporting the Notes database Rich Text fields as HTML?
Bonus information: I'm using IBM Lotus Domino Designer version 8.5
There is this fairly unknown command that does exactly what you want: retrieve the URL using the command OpenField.
Example that converts only the Body-field:
http://SERVER/your%5Fdatabase%5Fpath.nsf/NEW%5FVIEW/docid/Body?OpenField
Here is how I did it, using the OpenField command, see D.Bugger's post above
Function GetHtmlFromField(doc As NotesDocument, fieldname As String) As String
Dim obj
Set obj = CreateObject("Microsoft.XMLHTTP")
obj.open "GET", "http://www.mydomain.dk/database.nsf/0/" + doc.Universalid + "/" + fieldname + "?openfield&charset=utf-8", False, "", ""
obj.send("")
Dim html As String
html = Trim$(obj.responseText)
GetHtmlFromField = html
End Function
I'd suggest looking at Midas' Rich Text LSX (http://www.geniisoft.com/showcase.nsf/MidasLSX)
I haven't used the personally, but I remember them from years ago being the best option for working with Rich Text. I'd bet it saves you a lot of headaches.
As for the NotesMIMEEntity class, I don't believe there is a way to convert RichText to MIME, only MIME to RichText (or retain the MIME within the document for emailing purposes).
If you upgrade to Notes Domino 8.5.1 then you can use the new ConvertToMIME method of the NotesDocument class. See the docs. This should do what you want.
Alternativly the easiest way to get the Domino server to render the RichText will be to actually retrieve it via a url call. Set up a simple form that just has the RichText field and then use your favourite HTTP api to pull in the page. It should then be pretty straight forward to pull out the body.
Keep it simple.
Change the BODY field to Store contents as HTML and MIME
Open the doc in editmode.
Save.
Close.
You can now use the NotesMIMEEntity to get what you need from script.
You can use the NotesDXLExporter class to export the Rich Text and use an XSLT to transform the output to what you need.
I know you mentioned using LotusScript, but if you don't mind writing a small Java agent (in the Notes client), this can be done fairly easily - and there is no need to modify the existing form design.
The basic idea is to have your Java code open a particular document through a localhost http request (which is simple in Java) and to have your code capture that html output and save it back to that document. You basically allow the Domino rendering engine to do the heavy lifting.
You would want do this:
Create a form which contains only the rich-text field you want to convert, and with Content Type of HTML
Create a view with a selection formula for all of the documents you want to convert, and with a form formula which computes to the new form
Create the Java agent which just walks your view, and for each document gets its docid, opens a URL in the form http://SERVER/your_database_path.nsf/NEW_VIEW/docid?openDocument, grabs the http response and saves it.
I put up some sample code in a similar SO post here:
How to convert text and rich text fields in a document to html using lotusscript?
Works in Domino 10 (have not tested with 9)
HTMLStrings$ = NotesRichTextItem .Converttohtml([options] ) As String
See documentation :
https://help.hcltechsw.com/dom_designer/10.0.1/basic/H_CONVERTOHTML_METHOD_NOTESRICHTEXTITEM.html
UPDATE (2022)
HCL no longer support this method since version 11. The documentation does not include any info about the method.
I have made some tests and it still works in v12 but HCL recommended to not use it.
Casper's recommendation above works well, but make sure the ACL is such to allow Anonymous Access otherwise your HTML will be the HTML from your login form
If you do not need to get the Richtext from the items specifically, you can use ?OpenDocument, which is documented (at least) here: https://www.ibm.com/developerworks/lotus/library/ls-Domino_URL_cheat_sheet/
https://www.ibm.com/support/knowledgecenter/SSVRGU_9.0.1/com.ibm.designer.domino.main.doc/H_ABOUT_URL_COMMANDS_FOR_OPENING_DOCUMENTS_BY_KEY.html
OpenDocument also allows you to expand sections (I am unsure if OpenField does)
Syntax is:
http://Host/Database/View/DocumentUniversalID?OpenDocument
But be sure to include the charset parameter as well - Japanese documents were unreadable without specifying utf-8 as the charset.
Here is the method I use that takes a NotesDocument and returns the HTML for the doc as a string.
private string ConvertDocumentToHml(Domino.NotesDocument doc, string sectionList = null)
{
var server = doc.ParentDatabase.Server.Split('/')[0];
var dbPath = doc.ParentDatabase.FilePath;
string viewName = "0";
string documentId = doc.UniversalID.ToUpper();
var ub = new UriBuilder();
ub.Host = server;
ub.Path = dbPath.Replace("\\", "/") + "/" + viewName + "/" + documentId;
if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(sectionList))
{
ub.Query = "OpenDocument&charset=utf-8";
}
else
{
ub.Query = "OpenDocument&charset=utf-8&ExpandSection=" + sectionList;
}
var url = ub.ToString();
var req = HttpWebRequest.CreateHttp(url);
try
{
var resp = req.GetResponse();
string respText = null;
using (var sr = new StreamReader(resp.GetResponseStream()))
{
respText = sr.ReadToEnd();
}
return respText;
}
catch (WebException ex)
{
return "";
}
}