125 articles this week. Welcome to this week's newsletter from CodeProject. To ensure that future newsletters you receive from The Code Project aren't mistakenly blocked by antispam software, be sure to add the maillist.codeproject.com domain to your list of allowed senders. I'll be travelling this week so a quiet one for me. However, I'll leave you with a few CodeProject tips that can make life a little more interesting: Are you a blogger? We have a feature on The Code Project that allows you to share your technical blogs with other developers from the comfort of your very own blog. If you write technical blog posts and want to get those posts out to a wider audience, with an added bonus of getting more visitors to your own blog, then use our Blog feed aggregator. Save Your Search A quick reminder that our search page has the ability to save your favourite searches. After you've searched for your content (and narrowed down the scope, and sorted, and filtered) just type a query name in the "Saved queries" box in the left hand column of the page and it's there for evermore. Our Tip Wiki If you're a Silver level member or above feel free to update the Tips and Tricks for CodeProject.com article. There's a lot of nooks and crannies new users would love to find. cheers, Chris Maunder Advertisements | Mobile Apps are Dead You're an application artist, but your tools force you to be a code slinger. Another reason why Mobile Apps are Dead. Join the Telerik online keynote on February 12 and learn what comes next. Register today! | | Want to learn Ruby? If you're a programmer, you don't need a course that wastes your time telling you how programming works. This course gets straight down to business, and gets you up to speed on Ruby. | This week's survey: Who most influences your programming career? Most popular new articles 20 Jan 2014 - 26 Jan 2014 | More and more organizations in the UK, Germany and The Netherlands are adopting Agile methods to help manage complex work and improve project delivery. Whether you're a Project or Product Manager, Team Leader, Technical Lead, CTO, President or CEO, you'll want to make sure you don't miss out on this guide that is packed with everything you need to understand about how to work in Agile environments. This guide provides tips for using Agile approaches to plan, manage, and deliver high-value work. You'll learn more about the differences...
Download Now | Latest Additions 125 articles overall. 76 new, 49 updated. New articles added - Data-driven troubles - Ivan Yakimov
Some problems I faced trying to use data-driven tests in Microsoft Testing Framework
Articles updated - Extended CComboBox - Flaviu2
A combobox control which shows a drop down window to assist the user.
- Free .NET Spreadsheet Control - Jing-Lu
.NET Spreadsheet Control written in C#. Supports Cells Merge, Border Style, Pattern Background Color, Data Format, Freeze, Formula, Macro and Script execution.
- Tiny Framework for Parallel Computing - Igor Ladnik
This article presents a simple framework for parallel computing applicable to managing operation flow for machine and process control, gaming, simulators, etc.
- WPF Spreadsheet - sebastienj
A WPF clone of Excel spreadsheet, with several doors open for extensibility.
New Tips and Tricks added Tips and Tricks updated New Technical Blogs added - OneTrueError and ASP.NET - jgauffin
OneTrueError is my new startup which also is a member of Microsoft BizSpark. This post is about the client library for ASP.NET (WebForms/MVC/WebAPI). It will catch and handle all uncaught exceptions automatically. They are also uploaded to our site for … Continue reading →
- View C++ as a Federation of Languages - Paul Watt
My favorite C++ books are from Scott Meyers, Effective C++ series. The first item in Effective C++, 3rd Edition is titled View C++ as a federation of languages. I took note of this suggestion the first, and each successive time I read through this book. I thought of this as a fresh way to view the b
- Software Maintenance is a Myth - Paul Watt
Code maintenance is generally viewed as a separate task in the development lifecycle. The hard work of designing and implementing the product has been performed, and although software test did their best to get in the way and kept finding issues the program, the product shipped. Now comes the mainte
- An Interesting List of Development Stuff (January 2014) - Rion Williams
Software development is a fascinating thing. With a scope so vast and so many languages, topics and general cool things that people are doing, it can be difficult to keep up. So I have decided to start compiling a few of the links, resources, blog posts and other projects that I find “interest
- Python's namedtuple… for .Net! - BC3Tech
One of the things I have seen people applaud about Python is its "namedtuple" class. If you could describe this in terms of .Net's Tuple (and ) it would be to basically say that it's the same as Tuple, but if instead of "Item1" on Tuple you got "Name" or "Age" or whatever […]CodeProject-->
- Teaching Kids Programming With RubyStory - Terrence Dorsey
TL;DR version: I wrote some course materials and sample code for teaching the basics of Ruby programming to middle-school kids. The course is called RubyStory and teaches just enough Ruby to create a choose-your-own-adventure style storytelling game. Last year my older daughter started fifth grade a
- Error Handling in WCF RESTful Service - Imran Abdul Ghani
WCF possesses the capability to handle errors for RESTful services and return appropriate HTTP status code as well as error details using standard formats like JSON or XML. So, WebFaultException is the class used to return: HTTP status code only, orHTTP status code and user-defined type.We can defin
- Truthy Vs Falsy Values in JavaScript - Arpit Jain
Truthy Vs Falsy Values in JavaScript
- Why Am I Developing This?!? - Zac Gery
A question that arises if one works in programming long enough
- Creating a professional looking calendar control using jQuery - mopicus
One of the most used controls in a web page is the Calendar control. I’m sure you have seen so many and irritating ones as me. Let’s see how to create a professional calendar control using jQuery and Javascript. As … Continue reading →
- Object Oriented (A) (D) (P) - Vidyasagar MSC
Object-Oriented Programming What then, is object-oriented programming (or OOP, as it is sometimes written)? We define it as follows: Object-oriented programming is a method of implementation in which programs are organized as cooperative collections of objects, each of which represents an instance o
- Creating a wireless router / access point with #raspberrypi and #raspbian #linux - aetheon
What about creating my own low powered development network infrastructure at home? Sounds like a good idea right? You can hack the router settings, creating vlans, control your network traffic, ...Other reason is to create an abstraction layer between your ISP router and your physical network that c
- Proof-of-Concept Using Spring Roo - Keyhole Software
In my time with Keyhole, I’ve been involved in a number of projects where the client was asking us to rewrite a legacy system while retaining their existing database. Sometimes it helps to give a quick demo on how using current technologies can make it easier to develop, test, and maintain the
- NuGet 2 Essentials: a review - Artem Smirnov
codeproject If you are a .Net developer, there's no way you've never used, or at least heard about, NuGet. Unless you don't use any external dependencies, this package manager is a must have tool. And, if you want to learn it, you can spend a day or two reading various blogs, with lots of repeti
- From Good to Great - Paul Watt
Having good engineers on your team can make the difference between a projects success or failure. Good engineers are able to jump in and solve problems, design the solution, and implement the code to make it all work. They may be on the team from the start, or brought in at the end to help get the p
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