Nice shipping list. Some practices to write better C#/.NET code – CodeProject.
READ MORE »Building a Prism 4 application using MEF via Prism 4 MEF Application – CodeProject.
READ MORE »AvalonEdit is an extensible Open-Source text editor with support for syntax highlighting and folding. via Using AvalonEdit (WPF Text Editor) – CodeProject.
READ MORE »A TextBox with autocomplete capabilities in the manner of SQL’s Like command via AutoComplete TextBox with substing search, similar to SQL Like or Contains – CodeProject.
READ MORE »Concepts and patterns for the handling of strings in multilingual applications via .NET String Resources – CodeProject.
READ MORE »Have you got tired of attaching the Visual Studio debugger to the service application? I got the solution just for you! It’s a small helper class containing a static method which you need to invoke. via An easier way to debug windows services – CodeProject.
READ MORE »A technique to make working with XML easier via XmlNode – CodeProject.
READ MORE »Serialize/deserialize your objects using generics. via XML serialization using Generics – CodeProject.
READ MORE »Exception handling particulars in C# via Exception handling particulars in C# – CodeProject.
READ MORE »This article is about the different possibilities of type conversion provided by the .NET Framework. At the end, it offers a combination of all these methods (and more) within the UniversalTypeConverter which converts nearly every type to another type. via Universal Type Converter – CodeProject.
READ MORE »A nice VS extension to test your regex on-the-fly. Regular Expression Tester Extension.
Programmer Day has been celebrated on the 256th day of the year since … well, that isn’t quite clear, but this appears to be at least the third. WTF, nobody warned me! via Buzzblog: It’s Programmer Day! … (Is that the best you can do?).
I’m still experimenting with Dialogue Sheets for Retrospectives (the download page, and my earlier blog entry) and so are other people. Of the feedback I’ve had so far it has been overwhelmingly positive. Perhaps people who aren’t positive don’t bother trying them. via Retrospectives – common or not, a small survey | Agile Zone.
It sounds good to say that you shall not and will not release code with bugs – that your team has “zero bug tolerance”. It makes for a nice sound bite. It sounds responsible. And it sounds right. But let’s look carefully at what this really means. via Zero Bug Tolerance Intolerance | [...]
Frequent demos for immediate feedback are extremely imporant and come to fill the gap between the development team (what is implemented) and end users (what they really want from the system).The fact that from the early stages of the project, the customer participate at regular intervals in such meetings, ensure that critical requirement [...]
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