LINKBLOG for August 16, 2008
Aug 16th, 2008 by AZuidhof
The FUN-duh-MENTALs – Mo Khan
‘ It seems like we developers are proud of being an expert at something, but when that something becomes less and less relevant in building applications today, we tag it as “fundamental” ‘The ABCs of Alpha, Beta, CTP – Phil Haack
Microsoft’s way of looking at this stuff, learn all about OOB and RTW releasesCode Review Options – Steve Rowe
‘ There are many ways to conduct a code review. Here are a few ways I’ve seen it done and the advantages and disadvantages of each ‘Setting out to break the compiler… – Oren Eini
For some serious stack overflowThe Most Funny Interface Of The Year … IQueryable – Bart de Smet
‘ What’s in a name? (…) “I” means there’s work to do if you want to use it – that’s precisely what interfaces are all about (the Imperative form of to Implement). “Queryable” is the promise of the interface – what we’ll get in return for the “I” labor ‘Future Focus: Document Map Margin – Charlie Calvert
‘ (…) continuing our series of posts about proposed features for the next version of Visual Studio ‘Pagination Class for ASP.NET MVC – Mohammad Jahedur Rahman
Custom ASP.NET Page Tracing – Karl Seguin
‘ Starting a new large-scale project with an ASP.NET front-end, I wanted to add a mechanism to get constant feedback about what my app was doing ‘Async Computation Expressions – Resource and Exception Management – Matthew Podwysocki
F# oriented post ‘ Let’s go into each in detail as it makes the story around the asynchronous computation expressions quite intriguing ‘Setting up IoC/DI for your Controllers in ASP.Net MVC – Derik Whittaker
‘ The framework allows you to replace the default ControllerFactory with your own factory and because of this we can incorporate Inversion of Control/Dependency Injection (IoC/DI) into our controller ‘Random Acts of Coding: Starting with jQuery – J. Eggers
‘ The things that appeals the most to me about jQuery was it’s small foot print, the number of community based plug-ins that have been created, and the amount of examples and documentation on the web site ‘MSDN: Sometimes, you can get good help these days – Theo Moore
‘ It is one of the most practical MSDN articles I’ve read. It illustrates a bad call (like the one I had), and had two other versions of how to make the call the right way and even explained why it works ‘Mix a little WPF, with some Scrum and dash of TFS and you get… Task Board for Scrum for Team System Beta 2 Released – Greg Duncan
Testability in .Net – Jacob Proffitt
‘ (…) Typemock means that you can unit test literally any public method of any public class, regardless of any and all internal dependencies that class might have. And you can do so without changing the design and/or architecture of your software at all ‘ This means Typemock is possibly the only tool that let’s you post-test your rusty legacy code without changing itASP.NET gets no Respect – Rick Strahl
Rick needs a lot of words to get something off his chest

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