Contents tagged with [.NET C#]
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Sigh! Vista still has 260 character Path limitation!
I recently discovered, the hard way, that Microsoft Vista still has a limit of a maximum 260 characters for the Path. You can enter all the characters you probably want in [Control Panel | System | Advanced System Settings | Environment Variables | Path] but when you subsequently execute "Path" in a Windows Command Processor Console, you will see your result gets truncated at 260.
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Your Company's Next Senior Software Architect???
I would *love* to join a new and exciting software development team that has a single-minded focus on delivering high-quality software products to great customers. Perhaps that team is working in your company! Please have a look at my resume (http://weblogs.asp.net/jtobler/articles/48839.aspx) to find out if my skills match your customers' needs! If interested, contact me by email so I can get to work with you as quickly as possible! I currently live in San Diego, CA, but would consider relocating to Las Vegas, NV, or the Miami Ft. Lauderdale area, FL, to join the right company with the right challenge!
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[.NET C#] Unified C# 3.0 Specification
The C# team at csharp-online.net has a download link for a consolidated document presenting the Unified C# 3.0 Specification, which brings together all prior C# specs with the latest version. It weighs in at slightly over 500 pages, but looks to be the most comprehensive documentation yet available for C#, and is an essential reference for any .NET developer working at the deeper levels.
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[Database] Reporting Services Architecture
There is an excellent article on Reporting Services Architecture for Microsoft SQL Server 2005 Reporting Services (SSRS) at csharp-online.net. There is a great diagram on the first page. Reading the article from front to back is a little difficult, as it is broken up in small pieces, but the navigation menu to the right of the text is helpful for moving around when tracking down references. The article presented here is an extract from a book by Michael Lisin and Jim Joseph.
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[.NET General] O Happy Day!
This is just a "happy day" announcement that Microsoft has decided to make all of the Visual Studio .NET Express Editions permanently free! Thank you!
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[Laws] John Tobler's "Not About" Law
This law is very general but does have application to software development, as well:
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[Laws] New Rules!
Here are two new additions to John Tobler's Fun-duh-mental Laws and Rules:
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[Laws] John Tobler's Fun-duh-mental Laws and Rules
Now that I have three laws and a corollary under my belt, it's time to start my list:
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[Laws] John Tobler's "Three Strikes" Refactoring Rule
Another C# code review has just led me to state
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[Laws] John Tobler's Law of Tradeoffs
Until otherwise advised, I have laid claim to