Bee Eee Blog

Tag: .NET

c# getting a list of files from a directory

by brian on Jun.04, 2008, under .NET, c#, coding

Here’s how to get an array of file descriptors (name and other information).

System.IO.DirectoryInfo di = new System.IO.DirectoryInfo(Program.DataDirectory);
System.IO.FileInfo[] files = di.GetFiles("*.txt");
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c# getting the application directory.

by brian on Jun.04, 2008, under .NET, c#, coding

Getting the directory that the application is in at run-time is nice.  Here’s the code.

string appDir = AppDomain.CurrentDomain.BaseDirectory;
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c# Mandelbrot fractal unleashed!

by brian on May.15, 2008, under .NET, c#, coding, graphics

I remember the first time I saw the Mandelbrot set.  It was incredible!  After I had successfully programmed at it on my 8088 (a very old DOS computer).  I would wait 10 minutes at a time for a screen to pop up.  The detail was nothing short of amazing.  The swirls, the shapes, the colors.  The neatest thing was the ability to zoom into it to reveal more and more and more detail.

Well it’s been many years and computers have improved a great deal as have the tools to program them.  So I wrote another Mandelbrot explorer.

Mandelbrot Image

What is the Mandelbrot set? Well….  In short it is Xn+1 = Xn2 + C iterated until the magnitude of Xn is greater than 4 or the maximum number of iterations is met then the number of iterations is used as the color of the pixel.  Xn is a complex number, C is another complex number where the x coordinate of the pixel defines the real part and the y coordinate defines the imaginary part of the number. The magnitude is defined as X2 + Absolute Value of (Xi2).  Then this process is repeated for each pixel.  Holy smoke that is a mouthful!

Anyway take a peek at the code if you’d like and surely get the app and have fun exploring the Mandelbrot set.

To zoom in a spot just click on it.  The number is the number of iterations.  The more iterations the deeper the pattern goes (well until you run into percision problems).

Mandelbrot Executable

Mandelbrot source code.

Have fun!

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c# force uppercase lettering in a ComboBox

by brian on Apr.28, 2008, under .NET, GUI, c#, c# coding GUI, coding

I recently changed from a TextEdit control to a ComboBox and was somewhat annoyed that there wasn’t a property that forced the input characters to all be uppercase.  So I dug around and came up with the following method using the KeyPress event.

         private void productNumber_KeyPress(object sender, KeyPressEventArgs e)
        {
            char c = e.KeyChar;
            // make it uppercase only
            if (c >= 'a' && c <= 'z')
            {
                int digit = (int)c;
                digit = digit - 'a' + 'A';
                e.KeyChar = Convert.ToChar(digit);
            }
        }

When the event handler is called it gives you a chance to edit the hit character. Just by changing e.KeyChar you change the actual input character. This is a nifty trick to have under your belt.

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c# getting rid of the jitter!

by brian on Apr.18, 2008, under .NET, GUI, c#, c# coding GUI, coding, graphics

I recently was getting greatly annoyed with some drawing code in my program.  I was drawing a photo that I could zoom and move around.  When I zoomed with the wheel though it would briefly draw the image in two positions.  The first position after it was zoomed, and the second position after it was re-centered on the screen.  Well this looked awful.  Not exactly professional looking.  So I tried a hundered different things.  I tried setting a bool variable in the control to tell the paint function not to draw.  No good.  The drawing was done with asynchronous messages.  Then I tried  BeginInvoke.  That didn’t work also.  I tried SuspendLayout and ResumeLayout functions of the Control class:  No good.  Finally I just used the Visible property which kind of worked, well I didn’t get the double picture, but my background was light color and the foreground dark, so there was still a bad looking flicker.  After a couple of hours I finally found the solution at: http://weblogs.asp.net/jdanforth/archive/2004/03/12/88458.aspx. I worked on the example a little and boiled it down to two functions: StopDrawing and StartDrawing.

The techinque basically turns of drawing and events to the object on the win32 level underneath .Net.  This is very handy and it worked very very well.  Here is the code.

        using System.Runtime.InteropServices;
        private const int WM_SETREDRAW      = 0x000B;
        private const int WM_USER           = 0x400;
        private const int EM_GETEVENTMASK   = (WM_USER + 59);
        private const int EM_SETEVENTMASK   = (WM_USER + 69);

        [DllImport("user32", CharSet = CharSet.Auto)]
        private extern static IntPtr SendMessage(IntPtr hWnd, int msg, int wParam, IntPtr lParam);

        IntPtr eventMask = IntPtr.Zero;

        public void StopDrawing()
        {
            if (drawStopCount == 0)
            {
                // Stop redrawing:
                SendMessage(this.Handle, WM_SETREDRAW, 0, IntPtr.Zero);
                // Stop sending of events:
                eventMask = SendMessage(this.Handle, EM_GETEVENTMASK, 0, IntPtr.Zero);
            }
            drawStopCount++;
        }

        public void StartDrawing()
        {
            drawStopCount--;
            if (drawStopCount == 0)
            {
                // turn on events
                SendMessage(this.Handle, EM_SETEVENTMASK, 0, eventMask);

                // turn on redrawing
                SendMessage(this.Handle, WM_SETREDRAW, 1, IntPtr.Zero);

                Invalidate();
                Refresh();
            }
        }
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c# open an URL programatically

by brian on Apr.15, 2008, under .NET, c#, coding

Here is the easy way to open the browser from a c# .Net application.

string url="http://blog.bee-eee.com";
System.Diagnostics.Process.Start(url);

There you go. Pretty easy uh.

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c# joining an array of strings.

by brian on Apr.14, 2008, under .NET, c#, coding

Here the easy way to get comma’s between each of the items in an array in a string.

string[] string_array=new string[]{"1","2","3","4"};
String.Join(",",string_array)

The output is:

1,2,3,4
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c# Adjusting brightness,contrast, and gamma of an image.

by brian on Jan.23, 2008, under .NET, GUI, c#, c# coding GUI, coding, graphics

c# and gdi+ have a simple way to control the colors that are drawn. It’s basically a ColorMatrix. It’s a 5×5 matrix that is applied to each color if it is set.

Adjusting brightness is just preforming a translate on the color data, and contrast is preforming a scale on the color. Gamma is a whole different form of transform, but it’s included in ImageAttributes which accepts the ColorMatrix.


So here’s the simple code:

            Bitmap origanalImage;
            Bitmap adjustedImage;
            double brightness = 1.0f; // no change in brightness
            double constrast = 2.0f; // twice the contrast
            double gamma = 1.0f; // no change in gamma

            float adjustedBrightness = brightness - 1.0f;
            // create matrix that will brighten and contrast the image
            float[][] ptsArray ={
                    new float[] {contrast, 0, 0, 0, 0}, // scale red
                    new float[] {0, contrast, 0, 0, 0}, // scale green
                    new float[] {0, 0, contrast, 0, 0}, // scale blue
                    new float[] {0, 0, 0, 1.0f, 0}, // don't scale alpha
                    new float[] {adjustedBrightness, adjustedBrightness, adjustedBrightness, 0, 1}};

            imageAttributes = new ImageAttributes();
            imageAttributes.ClearColorMatrix();
            imageAttributes.SetColorMatrix(new ColorMatrix(ptsArray), ColorMatrixFlag.Default, ColorAdjustType.Bitmap);
            imageAttributes.SetGamma(gamma, ColorAdjustType.Bitmap);
            Graphics g = Graphics.FromImage(adjustedImage);
            g.DrawImage(originalImage, new Rectangle(0,0,adjustedImage.Width,adjustedImage.Height)
                ,0,0,bitImage.Width,bitImage.Height,
                GraphicsUnit.Pixel, imageAttributes);

So there it is. Simple enough isn’t it.

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