Archives
-
New book on UpdatePanel published by O'Reilly
O'Reilly is publishing my book on UpdatePanel. This is a short work (less than 60 pages) I did with Matt Gibbs that is scenario-focused and gives an in-depth look at the UpdatePanel control of ASP.NET "Atlas".
-
Script# brings compile-time and C# niceties to JavaScript development
I'm very excited to finally be able to point to this post of Nikhil's. I've known about this project from the start and am Super-Ultra-Mega-Excited (this expression (c) Andres Sanabria) about it, but until now I had to keep my mouth shut.
-
Tracing XmlHttp requests: an unobtrusive solution
To trace XmlHttp requests in your AJAX application, there are quite a few solutions. There's Fiddler, of course, and there is Nikhil's excellent browser helper. These solutions still have an important drawback: you have to install them and/or configure them.
-
Don't play this game
And I mean it. It will just eat up all of your free time. It will keep you awake at night and prevent you from doing anything else. For weeks. Or months. Your significant other will hate it.
Just look on the left of this page and compare my number of posts for April and May. Care to guess when I started playing The Game?
Don't start playing this game or you won't stop.
Oblivion -
GeoTagit: a great mashup made with Atlas
Try this:
-
ScriptDoc: document your Atlas classes
When I was talking at the Journées Académiques last week, someone in the audience asked me about documentation tools for Atlas classes. That was a great question, especially as I had such a tool ready...
-
.NET 2.0 Book recommendation
I've been meaning to do that for a while. A few months ago, I had the pleasure to review the ASP.NET 2.0 part of Patrick Smacchia's excellent Practical .Net2 and C#2. The book is really excellent and is the most complete I know on .NET 2.0. It covers with unparallelled accuracy everything about .NET 2.0. This book is an almost 900 page masterpiece and reference book that I highly recommend.
Practical .Net2 and C#2