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Thread: Ever looked at your first posts?

  1. #1

    Thread Starter
    Frenzied Member <ABX's Avatar
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    Ever looked at your first posts?

    meh.... i was looking for some code in a older post and i stumbled on to some of my first posts.

    How Would I Use The Decimal Type?
    imao
    Tips:
    • Google is your friend! Search before posting!
    • Name your thread appropriately... "I Need Help" doesn't cut it!
    • Always post your code!!!! We can't read your mind!!! (well, at least most of us!)
    • Allways Include the Name and Line of the Exception (if one is occuring!)
    • If it is relevant state the version of Visual Studio/.Net Framwork you are using (2002/2003/2005)


    If you think I was helpful, rate my post
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  2. #2
    The Devil crptcblade's Avatar
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    No comment

    Laugh, and the world laughs with you. Cry, and you just water down your vodka.


    Take credit, not responsibility

  3. #3
    Fanatic Member
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    how do i get a command button to activate a form??

    ^^ crpctblade's first post =)

    *snickers*

  4. #4
    Banished Cander's Avatar
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    Stack Overflow
    See the features of Visual Studio 2010 and C# 4.0: The 10-4 show on Channel9

  5. #5

  6. #6
    I'm about to be a PowerPoster! mendhak's Avatar
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  7. #7
    The picture isn't missing BuggyProgrammer's Avatar
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    I asked how to make random characters. The guy who helped me doesn't exist anymore!
    Remember, if someone's post was not helpful, you can always rate their post negatively .

  8. #8
    I'm about to be a PowerPoster! mendhak's Avatar
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    Buggy.

  9. #9
    type Woss is new Grumpy; wossname's Avatar
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    Originally posted by BuggyProgrammer
    I asked how to make random characters. The guy who helped me doesn't exist anymore!
    :mike:?

  10. #10
    Hyperactive Member Mosabama's Avatar
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    I cant join you to show my first post as I reached 100... but you guys really funny...
    My software never has bugs. It just develops random features.
    I RATE, YOU RATE!!!

  11. #11
    pathfinder NotLKH's Avatar
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    My First Post...
    Hey, People!
    I never knew this, but I was wondering if any of you know why it happens. I Have a program monitoring approx. 7000 dir's and files, storing critical info into a Database. One of the checks that I just incorporated is if it detects a different file creation timestamp, it closes the old record and generates a totally new entry. Well, it seems that the creation dates of all our stored files have been incremented by an hour due to Daylight Savings time, and needless to say, Every DB Entry closed, and a new one was generated. This is not critical to what I do with the DB, But it is annoying! Any Idea why file creation date/time stamps are not static, but alter with DST?

    { Ex: a file that originally was stamped with a creation date/time of 02/01/01 2:20:06 PM Now says 02/01/01 3:20:06 PM }
    -Thanks
    -NotLKH
    Still not satisfied with why File Creation Date/Time stamps aren't static. Hmmm, I wonder if the same thing happens with files on CD, when viewed from a computer, comparing the day before DST against the day after DST.



    -Lou

  12. #12
    Fanatic Member riis's Avatar
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