Wednesday, April 10, 2013

My feed url changed

Before one year my blog has its own domain name www.dotnetjalps.com and at that time I did not changed the URL of my rss feeds. But now feed burner is providing me a way to change it without effecting my current subscribers so I have changed that to match my domain name.

Following is a new URL for my feeds.
http://feeds.feedburner.com/DotNetJalps

Please note that existing subscribers don’t have to change anything. Only the new subscribers will have that changed now.

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Monday, March 25, 2013

ASP.NET 4.5 TextBox TextMode Property

Right now everybody is talking about HTML5 and its contains lots of new features like web sockets, canvas, new intput types with validation etc.

ASP.NET 4.5 text mode property enhancement:


With HTML5 new input types is going to be one of coolest feature and in future more and more people are going to use that feature. So in asp.net 4.5 asp.net development team given a support via TextMode property enhancements.

In earlier versions of ASP.NET we used have only three properties for TextMode property of asp.net textbox control.
  1. MultiLine- for multiline textbox.
  2. Password- for password textbox
  3. SignleLine –for single line textbox
With ASP.NET 4.5 you are going to have tons of options with TextMode property.
  1. Color- for Color entries
  2. Date-  for date entries. You can enter dates only
  3. DateTime – for datetime entries with respect to local time zone.
  4. DateTimeLocal- for datetime entries with respect to local time zone.
  5. Email- for email address
  6. Month- for month and year entry.
  7. Number- for  entering numeric values.
  8. Range- for containing range between two numbers.
  9. Search- for search field. A search field is like regular text fields
  10. Tel- for telephone number.
  11. Url- for website url entries. It will only contain urls.
  12. Week- for entering weeks and year.
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Saturday, March 23, 2013

Difference between All and Any operator in linq

In this post we are going to learn about difference between ‘All’ and ‘Any’ operator in Linq.

Difference between ‘All’ and ‘Any’ operator:


All operator checks whether all elements have met specific conditions or not while Any operator check whether there is any elements exist in collection or not?

So what we are waiting for Let’s take a example.
using System;
using System.Linq;

namespace ConsoleApplication1
{
    class Program
    {
        static void Main(string[] args)
        {
            int[] intArray = {1,2,3,4,5};
            bool result = intArray.All(i => i > 2);
            Console.WriteLine(result);
            result = intArray.Any();
            Console.WriteLine(result);
            Console.ReadLine();
        }
    }
}
In the above example you can see that I have created an integer array and then checked with both all and any operator. In first condition I have checked that whether elements are greater then 2 or not and same way I have checked with any operator that its contains any element or not?

Now let’s run that example. To see how its works.
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