Maybe it's me stupid, but I was looking for this for quite long and finally figured out how to. So I thought it could save someone's time too.
Say we have a JSPX page bound to a ViewObject. Also there's a backing bean for this page. What we want is to access from the backing bean [...]
By: Adrian Hardy Ski boots & bindings are two of the most important items you will need when skiing. Although you would think that the skis are the most important item because they are sold based on their performance – good for back country, off piste skiing or good for sharp turns on harder snow – it is the ski boots and bindings that are most important. They are the connection that you have
I was curious how WCF timings compared using different transport bindings. Here's what I came up with: Buffered -------- WSHttpBinding : time=00:00:00.7206547, length=11520054 NetTcpBinding : time=00:00:00.5371746, length=11520054 Streaming --------- BasicHttpBinding : time=00:00:00.9087755, length=11520054 NetTcpBinding
As the message suggests, the code is calling Control.DataBindings.Add twice with what amounts to the same parameters.One way this might happen is if you call the same code more than once in your program to reload your datasource for some reason, and in this code, you have lines such as:Me.TextBox1.DataBindings.Add("Text", myDataTable, "Col1Name")Me.TextBox2.DataBindings.Add("Text", myDataTable, "Col2Name")Me.TextBox3.DataBindings.Add("Text", myDataTable, "Col3Name")On the second call, this would attempt to add a duplicate binding to the DataBindings collection. One solution is to Clear the DataBindings collection before you add your new binding.Me.TextBox1.DataBindings.Clear();Me.TextBox1.DataBindings.Add("Text", myDataTable, "Col1Name")Me.TextBox2.DataBindings.Clear();Me.TextBox2.DataBind
By: Cindy Thiesse Looking for a great pair of bindings for either a beginner or an expert, this would be the one! Compared to some of the other bindings out there this one would cost way more. So, you don't have to pay an arm and a leg for a great pair of bindings.Those dog's killing you due to your bindings. What are you still wearing them for when you can have a new pair that will not kill your dogs. Go ahead and splurge on yourself and your worth it. Now you can ride in comfort! If durability is another issue these will fit that description.Exploring all different terrain and getting stuck do to the bindings. Well no need to get stuck anymore. Don't limit your exploring to just one area go where you never thought you would. What are you holding back for! go explore all those areas you thought you wouldn't be able to go.These bindings are super light thanks to the new nylon composite hybird material so they wont break in the middle of the run. Cool Idea composite nylon hybird! Ny
By: Cindy Thiesse Looking for a great pair of bindings for either a beginner or an expert, this would be the one! Compared to some of the other bindings out there this one would cost way more. So, you don't have to pay an arm and a leg for a great pair of bindings.Those dog's killing you due to your bindings. What are you still wearing them for when you can have a new pair that will not kill your dogs. Go ahead and splurge on yourself and your worth it. Now you can ride in comfort! If durability is another issue these will fit that description.Exploring all different terrain and getting stuck do to the bindings. Well no need to get stuck anymore. Don't limit your exploring to just one area go where you never thought you would. What are you holding back for! go explore all those areas you thought you wouldn't be able to go.These bindings are super light thanks to the new nylon composite hybird material so they wont break in the middle of the run. Cool Idea composite nylon hybird! Ny
Books
Books!
Glorious Books! They’re
here! It’s like Christmas morning
without the creepy feeling of being indebted to a fat old guy who hangs out
with midgets in pointy shoes or the discomfort of witnessing your parents
having a silent argument with their eyes about why said fat guy appears to have
purchased a few hundred dollars more presents than he had budgeted for. Why my dad cared so much about Santa’s
spending habits was beyond me, but however deviant the old man’s motives might
have been, he had damn fine taste in toys.
Damn fine. All that insanity
aside, I love books. When I was a kid,
going to the library was a weekly occurrence that my brother and I greeted with
the kind of fervor that children usually reserve for a chocolate smothered Elmo
pizza pool party. Granted, at least at
first, a lot of that probably had to do with the fact that my mother was a
genius manipulator and ended every library trip with a chocolate dipped ice
cream co