A common task in N-tier .NET web application development involves compiling components. You can compile components in several different ways, from using commands executed at the DOS command prompt to using methods available through the Visual Studio .NET Integrated Development Environment. This tutorial provides detailed steps for using each of these methods. The first method is for those who only have the .NET Framework installed and are comfortable with working from the command prompt. The second method also involves working from the command prompt but employs special tools installed with the installation of Visual Studio .NET. In the third method, you'll be introduced to compiling components using the visual interface of Visual Studio .NET. Whether or not you have Visual Studio .NET installed, you'll find the steps for compiling your components here.
If you are working in a mixed development environment you know that ASP "Classic" and ASP.NET cannot share session state information. I am offering the source code I used to this resolve this issue as well as discussing a couple of other possible resolutions.
Caching in Web applications can provide dramatic improvements in performance. ASP.NET provides caching at several levels for you to leverage and improve the responsiveness of your application.
Recently we had a Website that was redone from a large static site to a dynamically driven site in ASP.Net. The original site was heavily indexed by the major spiders on the Web, we did not want to lose the reference links in the engines and wanted to make sure the link clicked on would go to an appropriate paged in the site. In this article we cover how to create a document mapper so the old URL is redirected to the new related page within the new site.
In this article we will cover working with the system registry, both reading and writing values. In this example, we will cover creating a license registration for your application.
Web Services Enhancements for Microsoft .NET (WSE) provides an implementation of the Web services architecture for developers creating Web services by using ASP.NET and Microsoft .NET Framework client applications. It allows developers to incorporate security, routing, and attachment features in their application.
In this article we will cover exposing an existing ASP.Net application as a Web service. We will provide methods for creating the Web service, converting readers to data sets, and a client application for the new service.
Here we provide several methods for managing your Active Directory database via ASP.Net code. We'll cover querying user information using System.DirectoryServices, changing user accounts, and group management.
At my place of employment, I work a great deal with somewhat complex hierarchical data as part of our measurement and analysis software. Thus, recursion and I have become rather close friends over the last few years. While rewriting an old website, I needed to turn a set of four relational tables into a hierarchical data structure. The top level table held self-referencing relationships as well as child relationships to table 2. Tables 3 and 4 were your basic "run of the mill" child tables up through table2.