Search - Articles - Dev Forums - Favorites - Member Login  
DevASP.NET for ASP.NET, VB.NET, XML and C# (C-Sharp) Developers Monday, March 15, 2010

Dev Articles
Search Directory
ASP.NET
VB.Net
C-Sharp
SQL Server
 

FREE 12 month online training for ASP.NET & MS Expression Studio and a Free copy of MS Expression Web with Windows Server Purchase

Home > Search > Support WebCasts > Visual Studio .NET > Miscellaneous
Search:
What's New - What's Hot


Support WebCast: Working in the Microsoft Visual Studio .NET IDE        
Total Hits: 183  |  Today: 0       Rating:  
Read Reviews | Write Review |   Your Rating: 

April 24, 2002

In this session, we will discuss how to take full advantage of the Visual Studio .NET integrated development environment (IDE) features you can use to maximize your productivity while developing C++ software....

7 secrets for delivering successful software projects        
Total Hits: 89  |  Today: 0 Author: The Code Machine       Rating:  
Read Reviews | Write Review |   Your Rating: 

Folks in software development often discuss reasons for project failures, why it didn't finish by the deadline, why the quality of the deliverables wasn't great, so on and so forth. In this article I will be sharing some thoughts which may or may not be part of any fancy software development methodology. It is just pure experience. And also please bear with my English :-)....

Who Called the Script?, Concatenating Binary Files, and More        
Total Hits: 102  |  Today: 0 Author: Nancy Michell       Rating:  
Read Reviews | Write Review |   Your Rating: 

Is there a way to determine from which part of an HTML document a script was called, by getting, say, the ID of an element? Yes, there is. Take a look at the example in Figure 1. There are two buttons, each of which have script code that calls into a function named MyFunction. Inside of MyFunction is event.srcElement, which retrieves the particular element that triggered the initial event. Once you have this, you can get the caller's ID....

New VSTO Features Help You Customize Word And Outlook        
Total Hits: 103  |  Today: 0 Author: Steve Fox,Paul Stubbs       Rating:  
Read Reviews | Write Review |   Your Rating: 

The 2007 Microsoft® Office system has evolved into a robust business application platform that you can use to build and deploy a range of Office Business Applications (OBAs). OBAs are an emerging class of applications that address real-world and critical business problems. You can build them by seamlessly integrating existing Office software and services (Microsoft Office Word, Excel® Services and SharePoint® Server) with line-of-business (LOB) systems such as SAP....



DevASP.Net - Disclaimer - Privacy
© 2002-2010 DevASP.net