Results for "Author: kamilche"
Given a pathname, the class in this program returns a sorted list of directories or filenames in a string array, without the use of the drivelistbox, dirlistbox, or filelistbox controls. This program illustrates several important programming concepts, including quicksort, passing arrays to and from procedures, and handling undimensioned arrays. In addition, it's very easy to use.
Puts up a thumbnail size picture of all the pictures in a directory. Single clicking on a thumbnail takes you to a full size preview of that picture.
Converts BMP to JPG 'on the fly' and lets you view the result on-screen. Source code for the DLL included.
The book "Tricks of the Game Programming Gurus" by Andre LaMothe, copyright 1994, has an interesting chapter on artifical intelligence. However, all the samples in the chapter are done up in C. I've redone them into VB just for the heck of it. There are 5 simple programs illustrating chasing, evasion, patterned movement, random movement, and a program that combines all of the above.
Asynchronous Database Processing via Active EXE - When processing thousands of requests for a multi-user real-time application, you cannot afford to wait for the relatively slow database processing to occur. Here's the scenario: You have 1000 people already online and playing your multi-user game, and 10 people in the process of logging on right now. What do you do? You could process the logons right now, searching through thousands of user records, to load up their information - but then the game would appear to 'hang' for everyone already playing, waaaay bogus. You could process only 1 person at a time, in the main processing loop - that's better, but will add unnecessary slowdown to your program. What if you could log on the person in a BACKGROUND process, which wouldn't slow down the existing users? Ooh yeah. Or better yet, hand the request off to a machine across the network, dedicated to database processing? NOW we're talking! :-) You can do this easily, using Visual Basic ActiveX EXE's. Have fun with it!
Control IE through VB! Use the WebBrowser control in VB, and automatically navigate to sites, click buttons, fill in text fields, and more. As an example, I've included the 'NeoPets Helper' I made for my young daughter. NeoPets is a gaming web site that lets you have virtual 'pets'. You play various NeoPets games to earn NeoPoints, so you can feed your pets. However, my daughter's NeoPets were always starving because she couldn't play their games well. :-( So, I made this program for her. Anyways! Don't look at it for the NeoPets tips, look at it for tips on how to control IE through VB! It shows you how to navigate to various sites, wait until they load, click buttons, do generic mouse clicks and drags, extract text from the web page, fill in text fields on the web page, do 'screen scraping', press keys, and more. Feel free to use this program however you wish - but DON'T give me any credit, I don't want to know what you use it for. :-D
Load a Picture object from an array of bytes in memory. Can load any type of picture a normal picture box can load - GIF, JPG, or BMP. Doesn't require the intermediate 'saving of the byte array as a file on the hard drive' step, or an actual picturebox, to blit.
Given a pathname, this function will return a string containing a list of all files in that folder plus subfolders. Much easier than other examples posted here! A single recursive function, with no API's or special types needed.
This one-line function returns whether or not a string consists of only the characters A-Z, a-z, and 0-9.
A one-liner that resizes a picture to fit the dimensions of a picturebox. No API calls.
A VB replacement for the old WebCam 2000 software, which no longer works under Windows 2000. It's a WebCam with a difference - it doesn't take the picture until a request comes in! This is good for lowering the hits on your CPU AND bandwidth, because it doesn't waste its time taking a picture and uploading it every 5 minutes like most WebCams do. It sits on port 2000, and when a request comes in, it grabs the picture via TWAIN, saves it as a JPG, and sends the picture to the person.
Stop the infernal blinking of the scrollbar in VB6.
Drag a form that has no titlebar! Add the routine listed below, and call it in the 'MouseDown' event of the form (or a control on the form): MoveWindow Me.Hwnd
A simple video capture program, in only 44 lines of code. Now includes a button to change video size, and a button to change video source. For a more complete implementation, go to Ray Mercer's site at www.shrinkwrapvb.com
Displays a 3D room with textures and lights, and lets the user move around in it. Uses DirectX Retained Mode.
Via API calls, has the user choose a directory. No commondialog needed!
This is the complete code for a VB IDE addin that will add error handling to your procedure. Requires that you have a routine called "HandleError" in a public module accessible to all routines. Sample HandleError routine follows: Public Sub HandleError(ByVal CurrentModule As String, ByVal CurrentProcedure As String, _ ByVal ErrNum As Long, ByVal ErrDescription As String) On Error GoTo Err_Init MsgBox CurrentModule & " " & CurrentProcedure & ": " & ErrNum & " - " & ErrDescription Exit Sub Err_Init: MsgBox CurrentModule & " HandleError: " & Err.Number & " - " & Err.Description End Sub The best VB code handles errors in every routine - this makes the program very robust. However, there's no easy way to determine WHICH routine failed once you're inside of your global error handler 'HandleError'. Therefore, you must pass the routine name to the global error. This can be very tedious! :-O This addin adds an 'On Error Goto Err_Init' to the beginning of the routine, and an 'exit function', 'exit sub', or 'exit property' statement plus the error handling code at the bottom. To add error handling to a routine, place the cursor anywhere in the routine code, and choose 'Add Error Handling' from the 'Add-Ins' menu. The code this routine adds, looks like this: Exit (sub, function, or property here) Err_Init: HandleError CurrentModule, "(your routine name here)", Err.Number, Err.Description Note that it will automatically determine which sort of 'exit' statement is necessary, and what the name of the current procedure is, and pass the procedure name to the error handler.
Inserts text files at desired spots in the code before compiling. Doesn't modify original source!
Prints out a 'table of contents' for your Visual Basic program, which contains method names, syntax, and comments only. Useful as 'cover sheets' for the actual code printout.
A function that returns whether or not the shift key is currently down.