I have referenced jquery.d.ts in my TypeScript Project in Visual Studio 2012 and am getting the following error:
Error 1 Duplicate identifier
'nodeName' C:\DEV\MyProject\Scripts\JQuery\jquery.d.ts 786 2 pageMain.ts
Which leads to the following code in jquery.d.ts:
interface EventTarget {
nodeName: string;
}
I have restarted VS2012, and then again after deleting all the .sou files for the project.
I have checked all my references (includes) and found no other reference to EventTarget.
I have looked in lib.d.ts, and indeed, there is a EventTarget interface, but it does not implement nodeName.
FYI: I found two copies of lib.d.ts on my machine, and checked them both: does anyone know which one is used by the compiler? I did mods on both (changing the window.alert to window.alert2), but they had no effect.
Your jQuery.d.ts needs to be updated.
Here is a quick way to test the issue:
declare var x: EventTarget;
x.nodeName = '';
If you run this on the TypeScript Playground, you'll see that nodeName does not exist on EventTarget. Indeed, if you look at the lib.d.ts file, you'll find this:
interface EventTarget {
removeEventListener(type: string, listener: EventListener, useCapture?: bool): void;
addEventListener(type: string, listener: EventListener, useCapture?: bool): void;
dispatchEvent(evt: Event): bool;
}
However, if you run the same code within Visual Studio with Web Essentials, you'll find that nodeName does exist on EventTarget. This is because Web Essentials is using a newer version of lib.d.ts - if you disable Web Essentials, you would get the same error as you see in the Playground.
These issues will happen occasionally as the standard definitions are improved to keep up with what browsers actually support. Your definition files should be adjusted to keep in line with your development tools, with a preference to changing files such as jquery.d.ts rather than lib.d.ts.
Interesting bug, I faced same issue with className instead of nodeName
After spending sometime trying to solve the issue I found this article link in jquery.d.ts file
I am maintaining general.d.ts file to create required interface items needed.
I added the following definition to the file
interface EventTarget {
className: string;
}
Immediately I got an error message of duplicate identifier.
I kept it and saved general.d.ts, and went back to my original working file, I found the compiler passed through.
My assumption it is Web Essentials bug failing to load definitions properly.
Related
I have an F# Azure Function that is failing, in a bizarre way, and don't know how to approach fixing the issue. I created a minimum repro of the actual case below. The test function is manually triggered and uses FSharp.Compiler.Service as a dependency, as specified in the project.json below:
{
"frameworks": {
"net46":{
"dependencies": {
"FSharp.Compiler.Service": "11.0.6"
}
}
}
}
The run.fsx file looks like this:
open System
open Microsoft.FSharp.Compiler
open Microsoft.FSharp.Compiler.Ast
open Microsoft.FSharp.Compiler.Interactive.Shell
let Run(input: string, log: TraceWriter) =
// code here that uses FsiEvaluationSession
// and runs just fine
log.Info "I RAN"
So far, so good. The part that baffles me is that if I add the following function above Run,
// same dependencies as before
open Microsoft.FSharp.Compiler.Interactive.Shell
let foo (longIdent:LongIdent) =
// version 1
// "FOO"
// version 2
// longIdent.ToString ()
// version 3
longIdent |> List.map string
let Run(input: string, log: TraceWriter) =
// same as before
Uncommenting section 1 alone works fine, uncommenting section 2 alone works fine, uncommenting section 3 causes hell to break loose. The function compiles, but running it causes the following exception:
Exception while executing function: Functions.fsc-1. mscorlib: Unable to load one or more of the requested types. Retrieve the LoaderExceptions property for more information.
... which is puzzling to me, because
foo isn't even called anywhere
the signature and the 2nd version both use LongIdent, so this type doesn't seem to be the source of the problem.
Any suggestion on how to approach the problem, and what the problem itself might be, would be very appreciated - I don't even know where to start, and the same code runs perfectly fine in a local script.
I believe the reason for this is that Azure Functions SDK depend on FSharp.Compiler.Service (FCS) version 9.0.1. This means that when you try to load a different version of FCS, you will get the already loaded version 9.0.1.
This works as long as the public API of the FCS version you are using matches the public API of version 9.0.1, but when there are differences, it will crash, because your code assumes that the public API looks different. I suppose this might be triggering the issue here, although I'm not 100% sure how (possibly, LongIdent is now a different thing than it was in version 9.0.1?)
The very same issue used to happen with FAKE, which also bundles FCS and prevented loading of different versions. One of the options is to rename the assembly to avoid the clash.
I also got the same error, I solved it by doing the following workaround, please refer if it works for you also.
Right-click on the Project and select properties.
Goto Debug tab and create a profile with the reference to the below
screenshot.
Note: Replace UserName with your username.
I've got a NodeJS app (built in Visual Studio) which uses TypeScript, and MongoDB.
I've written a small library which wraps the MongoDB driver in some TypeScript classes and just today it started acting up.
If I include this line at the top of one of my library files:
/// <reference path='./_scripts/typings/mongodb/mongodb.d.ts' />
it build briefly, before begining to complain about "Duplicate identifier"s, and lots of them, for example:
Error 6 Type name 'Transform' in extends clause does not reference constructor function for '"stream".Transform'.
Error 7 Type name 'events.EventEmitter' in extends clause does not reference constructor function for 'events.EventEmitter'.
Error 8 Duplicate identifier 'errno'.
Error 9 Duplicate identifier 'code'.
Error 10 Duplicate identifier 'path'.
So I take that out, and everything is briefly ok, until I start seeing issues reported around this line:
import mongodbNS = require('mongodb');
If I were to then remove that line, I would see errors with things like:
public Connect: () => Promise<mongodbNS.Db>;
I can muddle through by adding a removing things and taking advantage of the brief window of compilability which opens up - but clearly this is not the way.
What is?
and they all come from node.d.ts
This is happening because you have two versions of node.d.ts (i.e. different files on disk) in your project.
With a skeleton project with FirstView from HotTuna package, and with Build linker behavior set to "Link all assemblies", I get the following error:
System.MissingMethodException: Default constructor not found for type Cirrious.CrossCore.IoC.MvxPropertyInjector
Using NuGet package v3.1.1 for all MvvmCross (4 packages)
LinkerPleaseInclude file does have the line
[MonoTouch.Foundation.Preserve(AllMembers = true)]
Using the latest stable build:
On PC:
Xamarin for VS 1.12.278
Xamarin.iOS 1.12.278
Mac:
Xamarin.iOS 7.2.2.2
Of course with Linker behavior of SDK only, it runs fine. Any suggestions anyone?
Solved; So, with the basic project, there were three consecutive errors in the following order:
System.MissingMethodException: Default constructor not found for type Cirrious.CrossCore.IoC.MvxPropertyInjector
can be resolved either by --linkskip=Cirrious.Core (ugly), or by including the following in LinkerPleaseInclude.cs
public void Include(MvxPropertyInjector injector){
injector = new MvxPropertyInjector ();
}
Next error is:
Cirrious.CrossCore.Exceptions.MvxException: Failed to construct and initialize ViewModel for type {0} from locator MvxDefaultViewModelLocator - check MvxTrace for more information
This one is difficult; Simple fix is to ofcourse to do a --linkskip=portableLibrary, or to crate an instance of the ViewModel somewhere (perhaps in LinkerPleaseInclude.cs); problem with the second approach at-least in my case is, most of my VM doesn't have a parameter less constructor, and obviously using IOC in this case wouldn't help.
Final Error:
System.ArgumentNullException: missing source event info in MvxWeakEventSubscription
Parameter name: sourceEventInfo
Either use --linkskip=System (ugly), or add the following to LinkerPleaseInclude.cs
public void Include(INotifyPropertyChanged changed)
{
changed.PropertyChanged += (sender, e) => {
var test = e.PropertyName;
};
}
This was enough for my basic project to run with LinkAllAssemblies, Using LLVM optimizer, and Use SGen collector.
Hope this will help anyone looking for a solution.
I hit this when my XCode was out of sync with the latest Xamarin on my Mac. Upgrading XCode to the latest resolved the problem.
I am running my application in VS2012 and I am getting a runtime error;
When I look in the "Original Location" I see mscorlib.dll, but not mscorlib.pdb.
Why is this happening and how do I fix it?
Goto Tools, Options, Debugging, General, Enable Just My Code
This will prevent the debugger from trying to launch on a Internal .NET Framework Assembly.
Goto Tools, Options, Debugging, Symbols and set a cache location. Then hit load in the above and it will fetch the necesary symbols for you and store them in the cache location you provide.
Microsoft's compiler tools create symbols in separate files with a .pdb extension (program database). This allows them to create detached symbols for release binaries. With a symbol server, your IDE can fetch the symbol file matching the specific version of the DLL during debugging. You can configure this system for your own product binaries as well which can be very useful for post-mortem debugging any crashes on end-user machines.
See Microsoft's documentation for more details about using their public symbols.
I had this issue when I was using a static variable, whose value is assigned off a static method.
So, whenever I ran the application, this line of code threw exception. If you place a debug point on this (like I did), you will notice the exception being thrown.
The best Solution to solve this error is:
1: Open App.config file.
2: Paste this useLegacyV2RuntimeActivationPolicy="true" code in the startup tag.
3: Save it.
Now the error would disappear.
Moreover see Image. I have done this for you.
This happened to me for a different reason: I had referenced an old version of NLog (2.0) and needed to reference version 4.0, instead.
In a VB console app, in my case it was none of the above.
Just doing a string calculation in the Dim declarations before my subs.
The offending code:
Dim FylPrefix$ = Fyl.Substring(0, Fyl.LastIndexOf("."))
Moving this calculation into the sub it was needed in fixed it! GERONIMO!!
This can happen when you initialize a variable in your class declarations and that initialization throws an exception:
class Program
{
static OracleConnection ora = getOracleConnection();
}
static void main(string[] args)
{
ora.Open();
}
static OracleConnection getOracleConnection()
{
OracleConnection orax = new OracleConnection(description=(host=myHost)
(port=1521)(protocol=tcp))(connect_data=(sid=mySid)));user id=user;password=pw;
}
If an exception is thrown by getOracleConnection() you can get this error. Move your assignment (but not necessarily your declaration) inside of main (where it belongs anyway), and you will get the actual exception that is causing the error instead of the mscorlib error.
In my case the exception began to appear after I changed the "Assembly name" in the "Application" tab of the properties window. If that's the case with you try reverting to the original name and see if the exception disappears.
Perhaps the reason for this was that the new name did not match the AssemblyTitle in AssemblyInfo.cs.
if you have this type of project runtime error in visualstudio
Answer:Cntr+Alt+E open Exception window Uncheck All chechboxes
Must and shoud its working written by B sriram Mca Giet College
rajahmundry, east godavary ,2014 batch
I'm using VS2012 and T4 templates and assemblies are supposed to be shadow copied, meaning that you can reference an assembly in a template and then recompile that assembly. But this simply doesn't work for me. When I try it, when I try to rebuild the assembly, I get errors like:
Unable to copy file "obj\Debug\xxx.dll" to "..\bin\xxx.dll".
The process cannot access the file '..\bin\xxx.dll' because it is being used by another process.
The only way around it is to restart Visual Studio, and this is so tedious that I'm ready to abandon T4 entirely. What could I be doing wrong?
So this isn't really an answer yet but hopefully we get there
Test ran the following in VS2013 (I realize you run VS2012)
<## assembly name = "$(SolutionDir)\TestProj\bin\Debug\TestProj.dll"#>
<## import namespace = "TestProj"#>
namespace ConsoleApplication1
{
class <#=Testing.Name#>
{
}
}
The TestProj contains the Testing class
namespace TestProj
{
public static class Testing
{
public static string Name
{
get { return "Tester" ;}
}
}
}
This did work very well in VS2013 and as far as I remember this worked in VS2012 as well.I will try to install VS2012 on one of my machines but do you mind testing this simple sample on your installation to validate it's not something in your solution that holds the dll?
In case you are interested in the project file you can find it here:
https://github.com/mrange/CodeStack/tree/master/q21118821
I work around similar issue. T4 design time template is processed in different App domain under the same process of visual studio. When rebuild the solution Visual Studio tries to replace the referenced DLL, and it cannot replace it because it is still in use.
I work around this issue by deleting the AppDomain in which T4 template is processed. See msdn