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I want to use voice activated commands on my website. I have already implemented it on win forms using System.Speech.Recognition. However can't manage to use it on web application. Example code snippet would be appreciated.
Can I use it with web service?
Yes it is possible to have voice activated commands on your website, but it'll probably be difficult to refactor you winforms code. There are many articles around, so I suggest you google around a little bit further. You have the choice: you can go for the server-side route or you can use client-side frameworks (or some hybrid approach).
Another option is to use the browser's built in Speech recognition capabilities. Chrome, for example, has this which can turn any input field into a speech-aware input field.
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Where would I start if I want to create my own text editor on the UWP platform?
The TextBox and RichEditBox have many limitations that hinder my requirements for a text control, and so I would like to create my own. I know it will be a long tedious process, but I don't mind putting in the work. I just don't even know what APIs to begin with. Thanks.
I would suggest that you start by looking at source code that others have written. You can download the following projects from GitHub:
10Develops/textie
ph1ll/UwpEdit
jan-patrick/ScriptText
UWP-Open-Source-Community/Atom
springcomp/TextPad
karan-randhawa/Notepad-Sharp
ph1ll/UwpEdit
Besides reading the code and running in the Debugger, I would also suggest looking at the Commit history for these apps on GitHub, to see what problems the developers struggled with.
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I want to create a simple windows form application which looks like Microsoft Word. I am using RichTextBox control right now. I did not find any way to make it have multiple pages, as Microsoft Word does. I just need a control (I guess it is RichTextbox) that can have multiple pages. I have tried RichTextBox but it was completely useless. Is there any other control or does Microsoft Word have any API to interact with through C# code? Is there any control to use?
This is the closest solution that I can suggest, but it is not exactly what you are asking for.
Basically, you can use some of the Microsoft office objects and classes, but it is not just a plug and play interface and requires some work on your end.
You may like this one too (again not a simple rich text control)
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Due to the nature of the keywords, I find it difficult to easily google this. I want to implement a "help" item on the menu bar that will launch some basic documentation for the user to read, after I have written it. Are there any standards or libraries I should be aware about before diving into this aspect? The program incorporating the "help" functionality will be a C# WPF Desktop application.
Example from MS Word :
I'm sure they don't reinvent the wheel every time they use the help function, and I don't want to either. Where can I look to find something open source that is similar to this functionality and maybe some general guidelines on how to write help for non-technical and technical users?
I think that following links should be useful for you.
Using F1 Help (CHM format) With WPF
how to create a chm help file for WPF Application? http://social.msdn.microsoft.com/Forums/vstudio/en-US/ce323cdb-5f9c-49d0-910e-81d2bba51d4d/context-sensitive-help-in-wpf?forum=wpf
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I have an application which could easily be controlled by a bot over network or even on the local machine(which simuates keyboard and mouse e.g.).
I want to avoid this using a captcha. The source has to work without internet / has to be generated during runtime on the computer itself.
Is there any open-source project for this or can someone give me a code example or a link ?
I've found an article "Simple CAPTCHA, Create your own in C#" by Raymund Macaalay. It is for an ASP.NET app, but he generates a normal C# bitmap image using different random fonts in STEP2, so this should also work in your WinForms app.
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Is there any sort of LinqToBigTable library out there or anything that makes it link up with C#? I am looking to integrate with App Engine BigTable.
There is no direct way to interact with the AppEngine datastore from outside of an AppEngine application. Can't be done.
Your best bet for making something like this work is to expose your AppEngine datastore through a RESTful interface that talks JSON. Then, you can use Linq-to-JSON to work with the data in the fashion you desire.
The only supported languages for the Google App Engine are Python and Java (plus Go, experimentally). See here. As neither is a .net language you can't use Linq with the Google App Engine.
There is a C# client library for Cloud Bigtable, but there is not one for App Engine.