Sorting custom data objects the easy way

by martin 28. September 2009 22:32

I recently had to implement custom sorting on couple of ASP.net pages that had to bind to a collection of custom data objects.  Not wanting to re-invent the wheel on every page, I looked for an easier solution online.  I ran across at least two worth mentioning: Generic Sorting Using Reflection in .NET By Jon Wojtowicz (http://www.eggheadcafe.com/articles/pfc/propertycomparer.asp) and Rocky Lhotka's MSDN article where he presents his Generics based PropertyComparer.  I liked Jon's solution in that it was written using recursion so that you could easily sort by properties of properties.  However Jon's implementation was not "Generics" based.  Rocky's implementation was generics based, but it lacked the recursion that my solution needed.  In the end, I ended up modifying Jon's code to be generics based.  I sent Jon an email asking for permission to share his modified code online, but unfortunately he never responded to my email.

Below is a link to my patch file to Jon's PropertyComparer.cs file.  You can download the original directly from Jon's project hosted on EggHeadCafe in the link above.

PropertyComparer.patch (2.99 kb)

Here is an example of how you would use this to support sorting in a Telerik RadGrid:

        protected void RadGrid1_SortCommand(object source, GridSortCommandEventArgs e)
        {
            List<Employee> employees = (List<Employee>)RadGrid1.DataSource;
            CompareOrder cmpOrder;
            GridSortExpression expression = new GridSortExpression(); 

            if (e.NewSortOrder.Equals(GridSortOrder.Ascending))
            {
                cmpOrder = CompareOrder.Ascending;
                expression.SortOrder = GridSortOrder.Ascending;
            }
            else
            {
                cmpOrder = CompareOrder.Descending;
                expression.SortOrder = GridSortOrder.Descending;
            }

            employees.Sort(new PropertyComparer<Employee>(e.SortExpression, cmpOrder));

            expression.FieldName = e.SortExpression;

            e.Item.OwnerTableView.SortExpressions.Clear();
            e.Item.OwnerTableView.SortExpressions.AddSortExpression(expression);
            e.Item.OwnerTableView.Rebind();
            e.Canceled = true;
        } 
 

Currently rated 5.0 by 1 people

  • Currently 5/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

Tags: , , , ,

ASP.Net | C#

RegEx helper method to make extracting patterns from strings a cinch

by martin 12. July 2009 15:10

Quite often I find myself trying to create a custom string from the “pattern” found in an input string.  Through trial and error, I have found a real simple and powerful way to do this, and here it is!  It works simply by using the grouping operator “()” for regular expressions and utilizing the power of String.Format.  This implementation is written as a .Net 3.5 extension method for the String class.  I overloaded it to be more flexible; you can pass in RegexOptions, a String representation of a regular expression, or a precompiled Regex object for optimal efficiency.  One important note is that Regex works such that the entire expression is always the first group match (grouping 0) and that all groupings that you explicitly state start at grouping number 1 and enumerate up from there.

StringRegexHelper.cs (1.54 kb)

    1 using System;

    2 using System.Text.RegularExpressions;

    3 

    4 namespace CustomExtensions

    5 {

    6     public static class StringRegexHelper

    7     {

    8         public static String FindAndFormat(this String StringToSearch,

    9             Regex RegularExpressionToSearchFor, String FormattingExpression)

   10         {

   11             String strResult = null;

   12             Match match = RegularExpressionToSearchFor.Match(StringToSearch);

   13             if (match.Success)

   14             {

   15                 String[] arrCaptures = new String[match.Groups.Count];

   16                 for (int i = 0; i < match.Groups.Count; i++)

   17                 {

   18                     arrCaptures[i] = match.Groups[i].Captures[0].Value;

   19                 }

   20                 strResult = String.Format(FormattingExpression, arrCaptures);

   21             }

   22             return strResult;

   23         }

   24 

   25         public static String FindAndFormat(this String StringToSearch,

   26             String RegularExpressionToSearchFor, String FormattingExpression)

   27         {

   28             return FindAndFormat(StringToSearch,

   29                 new Regex(RegularExpressionToSearchFor),

   30                 FormattingExpression);

   31         }

   32 

   33         public static String FindAndFormat(this String StringToSearch,

   34             String RegularExpressionToSearchFor, String FormattingExpression,

   35             RegexOptions RegularExpressionOptions)

   36         {

   37             return FindAndFormat(StringToSearch,

   38                 new Regex(RegularExpressionToSearchFor,

   39                     RegularExpressionOptions),

   40                 FormattingExpression);

   41         }

   42     }

   43 }

Here are 3 examples of how this can be used:

    1 strResult = "myusername-file1.txt".FindAndFormat(@"(\w+)-.",

    2     "{1}@ad.domain.com");

    3 // Returns "myusername@ad.domain.com"

    4 

    5 strResult = "BatchFile072009.txt".FindAndFormat(@"BatchFile(\d\d)(\d\d\d\d)\.txt",

    6     "Batch file for year {2} and month {1} retrieved from {0}");

    7 // Returns "Batch file for year 2009 and month 07 retrieved from BatchFile072009.txt"

    8 

    9 String strInput = "John_Doe;123-45-6789;04/12/2005";

   10 strResult = strInput.FindAndFormat(@"(\w+)_(\w+);(\d{3})-(\d{2})-(\d{4});(\d+)/(\d+)/(\d+)",

   11     "Last name = {2}  First name = {1}  SSN = {3}{4}{5}  DOB = {6}-{7}-{8}");

   12 // Returns "Last name = Doe  First name = John  SSN = 123456789  DOB = 04-12-2005"

Currently rated 5.0 by 1 people

  • Currently 5/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

Tags: ,

C#

Anonymous HTTP PUT with IIS 7

by martin 22. June 2009 21:32
From googling around in trying to get HTTP put enabled on IIS 7, I have concluded that turning on HTTP PUT verb support requires the installation of the WebDAV handler extension and that even then it only works in integrated authentication mode.  If this is not true, please let me know as I was forced to write my own put HTTP handler.  It actually turned out to be a lot easier than I thought it was going to be though.  Implementing IHttpHandler, I ended up just having to binaryread the request into a byte array and then use a binarywriter to write it to a file after validating the PhysicalPath of the request for user permissions and validating that the "pattern" is safe (ex. file extension, path).  I haven't tested the performance against the IIS 6 native solution, but it seems quite fast on today's server hardware.

Currently rated 5.0 by 1 people

  • Currently 5/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

Tags: , ,

ASP.Net | C# | Windows

SOAP interoperability problem with .Net consuming Axis ???

by martin 7. November 2008 23:21

It seems that the auto generated proxy classes for SOAP (Webreferences) seem to require the root element of the response SOAP body to be fully qualified by namespace by default.  One trick to overcome this that worked for me was to use wsdl.exe to create editable classes rather than using webreference.  Then I was able to remove the ResponseNameSpace attribute from the System.Web.Services.Protocols.SoapDocumentMethodAttribute attribute annotation.  This seem to allow the temporary infrastructure xml deserializer class to work correctly by making the call to XmlReader.IsStartElement return true for Axis generated SOAP responses that do not specify a namespace at all.

wsdl.exe /language:CS /out:CustomWebServiceProxy.cs  AxisServiceWsdl.wsdl 
( /namespace:MyAppNameSpace ) 

You can also remove the System.Diagnostics.DebuggerStepThroughAttribute attribute annotations so that you can step into (F-11 key) the runtime generated proxy code to see and debug the serializer and deserializer in action.  This comes in very useful when you are receiving a valid soap response over the network but your return object is null upon returning back from the webservice call.  I had to do this when all I was getting was null and had no error messages to grasp at.

 

Be the first to rate this post

  • Currently 0/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

Tags: , ,

C# | Java

Single Button Mouse for Kids

by martin 3. October 2008 23:07

A while back, I looked around the internet for a simple one button mouse that my 3 year old could use to play the games on PBSKids.org.  I was surprised that there was no cheap mice like this available.  My kid was young and having a hard time clicking only the left mouse button, so I decided to write a small program that would allow me to easily switch so that all the mouse buttons functioned as the left mouse button.

Now I simply fire up one exe and then I can launch IE in kiosk mode (via "c:\Program Files\Internet Explorer\iexplore.exe" -k http://www.pbskids.org ) and I can walk away and let my kids have relatively safe fun playing games on the computer.

Here is a link to the program:  SingleButtonMouse.exe

When run, it will automatically go into single button mode and add a notification icon to your task bar (click on this to toggle back to multi button mode).  It has been tested to work in Windows 2000, XP, and 2008.  (It should work in Vista too.)

 

For those interested, the source code is available here.  It is written in C# (requires .Net 2.0 runtime) and uses windows api hooking.

Currently rated 5.0 by 3 people

  • Currently 5/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

Tags:

C# | Windows

WinMobile Stop Watch

by martin 29. September 2008 11:32

Here is a simple little stop watch program that I wrote as my first Smart Device application some time ago.  It works on XP/Vista too.  Maybe somebody will find it useful.

Screen shot:



Download the program:  StopWatch.exe (10.00 kb)

 

Download the source code:  StopWatch.zip (33.89 kb)

Currently rated 3.5 by 2 people

  • Currently 3.5/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

Tags: ,

C# | Windows

Welcome

Please contact me if you have a great idea for a project and need technical expertise in designing, developing, or integrating a custom software solution. 

Recent Comments

Comment RSS