Friday, January 9, 2009

Microsoft StyleCop - Editing setting under Vista 64

Microsoft StyleCopy 4.3 has a master settings file named Settings.StyleCop
This file may be edited with the StyleCopSettingsEditor.exe.
Under Vista 64 write access to the program folders is restricted to users with Administrator privileges.
Here's the rub.
StyleCopSettingsEditor must be running as Administrator to write setting changes to
Settings.StyleCop.
Settings.StyleCop is associated with StyleCopSettingsEditor.exe thru the StyleCop extension, but the "Run as Administrator" option is only available when clicking on exe's.
You can "Run as Administrator" StyleCopSettingsEditor.exe but the exe requires a command line parameter pointing to Settings.StyleCop.

The solution:
Create a shortcut on the desktop to StyleCopSettingsEditor.exe.

Append "Settings.StyleCop" to the target which becomes:

"C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft StyleCop 4.3\StyleCopSettingsEditor.exe" "Settings.StyleCop"

Under the Compatibility tab check "Run as Administrator"

Double Click the shortcut to launch StyleCopSettingsEditor.exe. The program is now running as Administrator and has sufficient rights to update Settings.StyleCop in the program folder.

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Microsoft.mshtml.dll cannot be referenced in VS 2008 3.5 project

I am using VS 2008 and recently upgraded a project from .Net 2.0 to .Net 3.5. (thru the project properties page)
When doing this I checked the Client-only Framework subset option. When I compiled I had errors indicating that the compiler could not reference Microsoft.mshtml.dll.
When I checked the project references this one was marked with the asterisk.

Unchecking Client-only Framework subset option corrected the problem.

Andy

Sunday, September 7, 2008

Testing Enumerations in Eco Ocl

I can never remember the Ocl syntax used to refer to the value of an enumeration.

The syntax is $enumname$::$enumvalue$ 

Here is a sample Ocl string to select a particular value of VehicleTypes 

"VehicleSupplier.allInstances->select( Type = VehicleTypes::MotorHome)"

Monday, August 18, 2008

Using Linq extension methods with arrays

I was generating a file path and file name from user text.

This routine was vulnerable to chars illegal to the file system in the user text.

I needed to strip any illegal chars from the user text.  

The Path class has two static methods which return path and file name illegal chars.

These are:

Path.GetInvalidPathChars( ) -> char[]

Path.GetInvalidFileNameChars( ) -> char[]

In order to strip both I wanted to create the set union of these two arrays.

The Linq set extension methods return IEnumerable which cannot be easily copied to a new array.  

In the end I used the following to generate a set comprising the union of both sets of illegal chars.

List illegals = new List( Path.GetInvalidPathChars( ).Union( Path.GetInvalidFileNameChars( ) ) );

Note that if you wish to change the file extension it is important to add '.' to the list of illegal chars.  Failure to do so may result in your filename being truncated at the '.'.

 

Monday, June 23, 2008

Running wsewsdl3.exe in Vista 64 with VS2008.

Hi,

I ported a VS2005 project from my old XP machine to my new Vista 64 machine running VS2008.

In my project I was using Wsewsdl3.exe to generate c# code from wsdl definitions.

Wsewsdl3 refused to run with the error:

"Could not get the install directory for .NET Framework v2.0 SDK. Please install the .NET Framework v2.0 SDK."

I know that Wsewsdl3 is a pre-processor for Wsdl.exe and also knew that Wsdl.exe had changed paths between VS versions.

Luckily Wsewsdl3.exe is written in .Net and I was able to use Reflector to disassemble the source and find where it was looking for Wsdl.exe.

Here are the code fragments:

Registry.LocalMachine.OpenSubKey(@"Software\Microsoft\.NETFramework");

key.GetValue("sdkInstallRootv2.0")

When I looked in the registry of the old machine I saw this key.

At this point I installed the .Net 2/0 SDK 

http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/details.aspx?FamilyID=fe6f2099-b7b4-4f47-a244-c96d69c35dec&displaylang=en

This installed itself at:

C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio 8\SDK\v2.0

Now I opened the registry editor RegEdit.exe, moved to HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\.NETFramework and added a new string value with name

"sdkInstallRootv2.0" and value "C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio 8\SDK\v2.0"

Wsewsdl3.exe now runs.

I hope this has not screwed anything else!

Hope this helps someone.

Andy

Tuesday, April 15, 2008

.Net SDK Tools movedin version 3.0 and 3.5

I have installed VS 2008 and was trying to find the latest version of SDK tooks. (e.g. ResGen.exe etc )

It used to be under:

C:\Program Files\Microsoft Visual Studio .NET 2003\SDK\v1.1\Bin

But as of Version 3 it has moved to:

C:\Program Files\Microsoft SDKs\Windows\v6.0A\bin

Sunday, April 6, 2008

XPathNavigator and default namespaces

Here is a sample xml document with a default namespace:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?>
<Invoice xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" xmlns="http://informationage.co.nz/schema/invoicing">
<Amount>1906.50</AmountExcGst>
</Invoice>


How do I read the amount node in this xml document.



XmlDocument lXmlDoc = new XmlDocument();
lXmlDoc.LoadXml( soome source for the document above );

// Namespaces
XmlNamespaceManager lNamespaceManager = new XmlNamespaceManager( new NameTable( ) );
// Arbitrary prefix used for default namespace
lNamespaceManager.AddNamespace( "d", "http://informationage.co.nz/schema/invoicing" );

// Navigator
XPathNavigator lNavigator = lXmlDoc.CreateNavigator();
// Note that the default namespace elements must be preifxed with the namespace prefix.
XPathNavigator lNodeNav = lNavigator.SelectSingleNode( "/d:Invoice/d:Amount", lNamespaceManager );



The important thing to note here is that the XPath expression elements MUST be prefixed with the default namespace prefix
added to the namespace manager.

The expression "/Invoice/Amount" will return null.

This one wasted quite a bit of my time so I hope this helps someone else.

Andy