Results for "Author: remus oproiu vasii"
Write "Code 128 B" barcodes to a web page with just a little bit of VBScript and a little HTML. Some people are charging so much for such a little thing. I wrote this so I wouldn't have to pay hundreds of dollars for it...and it was worth it. It was just a piece of cake... There are many other barcode standards out there, of course, but I leave those to someone else.
This UserControl is a ComboBox control that has its dropdown window replaced with a TreeView control. Handling the mouse, the keyboard and the focusing was a bit tricky and the control is not 100% perfect but it works just fine. Two issues are unresolved, but they were not important to me: firstly, since the TreeView is a child control it cannot be drawn outside the form; and secondly, a ComboBox.CloseUp call must be placed on the Form.Click event since the control does not monitor its own parent. For diligent people it should be relatively easy to adjust this control to their own needs, and even to replace the TreeView control with something else and build other types of specialized ComboBoxes.
An example of creating splash screens similar to the Adobe Photoshop splash by using PNG images with alpha transparency. The desktop beneath the splash form is captured to a bitmap and the PNG is then superimposed over the bitmap. Finally, an illusion is created by placing and showing the bitmap exactly over the captured area of the desktop.
Write "Code 128 B" barcodes to a web page with just a little bit of VBScript and a little HTML. Some people are charging so much for such a little thing. I wrote this so I wouldn't have to pay hundreds of dollars for it...and it was worth it. It was just a piece of cake... There are many other barcode standards out there, of course, but I leave those to someone else.
This UserControl is a ComboBox control that has its dropdown window replaced with a TreeView control. Handling the mouse, the keyboard and the focusing was a bit tricky and the control is not 100% perfect but it works just fine. Two issues are unresolved, but they were not important to me: firstly, since the TreeView is a child control it cannot be drawn outside the form; and secondly, a ComboBox.CloseUp call must be placed on the Form.Click event since the control does not monitor its own parent. For diligent people it should be relatively easy to adjust this control to their own needs, and even to replace the TreeView control with something else and build other types of specialized ComboBoxes.
An example of creating splash screens similar to the Adobe Photoshop splash by using PNG images with alpha transparency. The desktop beneath the splash form is captured to a bitmap and the PNG is then superimposed over the bitmap. Finally, an illusion is created by placing and showing the bitmap exactly over the captured area of the desktop.
Write "Code 128 B" barcodes to a web page with just a little bit of VBScript and a little HTML. Some people are charging so much for such a little thing. I wrote this so I wouldn't have to pay hundreds of dollars for it...and it was worth it. It was just a piece of cake... There are many other barcode standards out there, of course, but I leave those to someone else.
This UserControl is a ComboBox control that has its dropdown window replaced with a TreeView control. Handling the mouse, the keyboard and the focusing was a bit tricky and the control is not 100% perfect but it works just fine. Two issues are unresolved, but they were not important to me: firstly, since the TreeView is a child control it cannot be drawn outside the form; and secondly, a ComboBox.CloseUp call must be placed on the Form.Click event since the control does not monitor its own parent. For diligent people it should be relatively easy to adjust this control to their own needs, and even to replace the TreeView control with something else and build other types of specialized ComboBoxes.
An example of creating splash screens similar to the Adobe Photoshop splash by using PNG images with alpha transparency. The desktop beneath the splash form is captured to a bitmap and the PNG is then superimposed over the bitmap. Finally, an illusion is created by placing and showing the bitmap exactly over the captured area of the desktop.
Write "Code 128 B" barcodes to a web page with just a little bit of VBScript and a little HTML. Some people are charging so much for such a little thing. I wrote this so I wouldn't have to pay hundreds of dollars for it...and it was worth it. It was just a piece of cake... There are many other barcode standards out there, of course, but I leave those to someone else.
This UserControl is a ComboBox control that has its dropdown window replaced with a TreeView control. Handling the mouse, the keyboard and the focusing was a bit tricky and the control is not 100% perfect but it works just fine. Two issues are unresolved, but they were not important to me: firstly, since the TreeView is a child control it cannot be drawn outside the form; and secondly, a ComboBox.CloseUp call must be placed on the Form.Click event since the control does not monitor its own parent. For diligent people it should be relatively easy to adjust this control to their own needs, and even to replace the TreeView control with something else and build other types of specialized ComboBoxes.
An example of creating splash screens similar to the Adobe Photoshop splash by using PNG images with alpha transparency. The desktop beneath the splash form is captured to a bitmap and the PNG is then superimposed over the bitmap. Finally, an illusion is created by placing and showing the bitmap exactly over the captured area of the desktop.
Write "Code 128 B" barcodes to a web page with just a little bit of VBScript and a little HTML. Some people are charging so much for such a little thing. I wrote this so I wouldn't have to pay hundreds of dollars for it...and it was worth it. It was just a piece of cake... There are many other barcode standards out there, of course, but I leave those to someone else.
This UserControl is a ComboBox control that has its dropdown window replaced with a TreeView control. Handling the mouse, the keyboard and the focusing was a bit tricky and the control is not 100% perfect but it works just fine. Two issues are unresolved, but they were not important to me: firstly, since the TreeView is a child control it cannot be drawn outside the form; and secondly, a ComboBox.CloseUp call must be placed on the Form.Click event since the control does not monitor its own parent. For diligent people it should be relatively easy to adjust this control to their own needs, and even to replace the TreeView control with something else and build other types of specialized ComboBoxes.
An example of creating splash screens similar to the Adobe Photoshop splash by using PNG images with alpha transparency. The desktop beneath the splash form is captured to a bitmap and the PNG is then superimposed over the bitmap. Finally, an illusion is created by placing and showing the bitmap exactly over the captured area of the desktop.