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Can anyone let me know how to write RTF to XML in Dot net.
Thanks
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Hi guys
I cant seem to create my own name for C# web services it give it a default name of webservice1, 2, 3 etc
I have seen in screenshots you can do it, but the edit box is disabled with the default name in it
Have i set it up wrong?
its the release version Prof
The Wudan Master
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sorry, a word with no business with your question: your name remind me of the famous poet of acient China.
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Hi Lucy
thats ok, its really from the film crouching tiger hidden dragon, i liked it a lot
Im english from the uk and have an ordinary real name
Wudan Master;)
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Yo you all,
I've got Visual Studio .NET Beta 2. I would like to know whether it's usable or if I should strive to get R1 instead and quit installing the Beta?
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Hi
The beta version was ok for C++ but when we tried to use if for web services We couldnt get a web refference from a deployed web service.
but if you are using it on your own IIS Server then I had no problems
Im not a VB person so I dont know about that;)
Wudan MAster
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I just got Visual Studio .NET enterprise. Its says I need NT 4 or Win 2000. Will it work on Windows 98?
Thanks.
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No,it does not work on windows98.
Mazy
"The path you tread is narrow and the drop is shear and very high,
The ravens all are watching from a vantage point near by,
Apprehension creeping like a choo-train uo your spine,
Will the tightrope reach the end;will the final cuplet rhyme?"Cymbaline-Pink Floyd
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Anyone knows if it's possible to download the symbols for all the .NET dll's?
I have the symbols for Windows XP installed, and would really like to get the symbols for .NET also...
- Anders
Money talks, but all mine ever says is "Goodbye!"
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I have a project:
-Research about XDE.NET and write a program to desmontrate.
But I don't know anything in .NET and XDE.NET
Can you help me ?
Hung Son
A Vietnamese student
i-g.hypermart.net
dlhson2001@yahoo.com
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I think it refers to Rational XDE.NET, search on www.rational.com
it's a pretty powerful tool from rational.
You can download a trial version.
Andres Manggini.
Buenos Aires - Argentina.
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I like it too. But I didn't find document about it. I have just known Rational XDE Professional has been designed by ground-up for developers. XDE stands by eXtended Development Environment.Its unique, tightly integrated support for Microsoft Visual Studio .NET allows Rational XDE Professional users to work in a single environment, avoiding the need to switch between many different, non-integrated tools.
If you know more and you have books, links, .... about XDE.NET, can you send me?
Thanks a lot.
Only Love!
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Sorry, I don't have any documentation, just the trial. You can see a few demos on their site.
Andres Manggini.
Buenos Aires - Argentina.
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Hi,
all
I have create a new asp.net web service ,and I put the whole solution in the /wwwroot/webserive.
In another window application, I use "add new web reference " to import the web service .I input "http://localhost/webservice/helloworld.asmx" in the
address line,and then the system display a dialog to prompt
me to download the helloworld.asmx file to my own local machine. So I want to know why? Could I only use the web service on the condition that I download it to my own machine?
Your advaced help will be appreciated!
Regards.
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I just tried adding a reference to an arbitrary webservice and it didn't prompt to save anything. Perhaps its just because its a local service?
James
Sonork: Hasaki
"I left there in the morning
with their God tucked underneath my arm
their half-assed smiles and the book of rules.
So I asked this God a question
and by way of firm reply,
He said - I'm not the kind you have to wind up on Sundays."
"Wind Up" from Aqualung, Jethro Tull 1971
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hi,
all
Why there is only asp.net web service template in my
visual c# projects and no web service template which is
reffered in most articles?
Is the two just the same?
And I find that my visual studio.net differs from others.
I want to know whether it is just the version problem or not.And if so,then the finall version is...?
regards.
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Bliven wrote:
Why there is only asp.net web service template in my
visual c# projects and no web service template which is
reffered in most articles?
If you are creating a web service that others will use (in .NET jargon others will consume your web service) you do it via an ASP.NET Web Service template.
Consuming a webservice is as easy as right click on your project then choosing "Add Web Reference" fill out the information it asks about your webserivce and you've got it made
Bliven wrote:
And I find that my visual studio.net differs from others.
I want to know whether it is just the version problem or not.And if so,then the finall version is...?
Visual Studio 7.0 Professional (Microsoft Development Environment 2002) version is: 7.0.9466
Microsoft .NET Framework 1.0 version is : 1.0.3705
HTH,
James
Sonork: Hasaki
"I left there in the morning
with their God tucked underneath my arm
their half-assed smiles and the book of rules.
So I asked this God a question
and by way of firm reply,
He said - I'm not the kind you have to wind up on Sundays."
"Wind Up" from Aqualung, Jethro Tull 1971
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Is it advisable to start coding the '.net' way or remain using
the Win32 api / mfc? Will .net objects replace win32 as the native api?
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UGenn wrote:
Will .net objects replace win32 as the native api?
Eventually I think they will. Once the .net framework is standard with all copies of Windows, it makes sense for developers to use the higher level objects to write apps.
However I will be writing Win32/MFC/ATL apps for quiet a while. It all depends on what my customers want. I know MFC and Win32 very well, changing now would only slow down my development time and introduce new bugs into my systems.
I will change eventually but at the moment I've got too much invested in the existing technologies.
Michael
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IMO, it would be a huge mistake for someone wanting to be a professional programmer to pin their future on a technology like .net. Web "applications" and other kinds of form based programming are going to continue to evolve into ever simpler methodologies. At the same time, every school in the country is trying their best to produce new generations of "computer literate" kids, which means that ever larger percentages of them are going to have the basic skills needed to put together web pages and "form based" applications (ie. a dialog box populated with some data bound controls) with these ever more simplified technologies. Heck, most of my son's 13 year old friends can already build fairly sophisticated web pages. This trend is only going to continue. Soon, doing that kind of stuff is going to be considered a basic secretarial level skill set.
However, no language is ever going to refine away the complexity inherent in a large application. A programmer is going to need to bring extensive knowledgeability of some kind of C/C++ level skills to the table to get a big job done. C# might replace C++ in this role, but I very much doubt it. MFC may evolve away or be replaced by something else, but I think it is going to be around for a long while yet, because dispite all of its flaws, it remains the most practical method of cobbling a large scale application together quickly in a windows environment.
"There's a slew of slip 'twixt cup and lip"
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you seem to have gone off a different tangent. the original pt is not about c++ but rather the relevance of the win32 api in the future.
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Fair enough. I'll try again. I am saying that a basic knowledge of win32 (with C++ or not) will remain important for serious windows programmers. .net is only in its infancy and, if it is successful, will continue to evolve in the direction of making simple programming tasks more quick and efficient. Which is a good thing. But it will not change the fundamental nature of programming. You *will* continue to need a good understanding of what is going on at the lowest levels in order to successfully tackle large scale projects in the future just as you have done in the past. I am also saying that if you commit yourself to a .Net view of the world, than you are going to be forced to compete against an ever growing number of people who are going to possess an ever more significant portion of your skill set. I certainly feel as though that is Microsoft's goal with this technology. Therefore, my point is that .Net is important, but a win32 oriented skill set (or a basic knowledge of any lower level OS api) remains more than relevant, it is essential. If that is not true, then we are all in deep do-do.
"There's a slew of slip 'twixt cup and lip"
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Can I use .NET platform on win98 and NT too?
Mazy
"So,so you think you can tell,
Heaven from Hell,
Blue skies from pain,...
How I wish,how I wish you were here." Wish You Were Here-Pink Floyd-1975
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Yep.
.NET is available for NT4, Win98, Win98SE, WinME, Win2K, WinXP Home, and WinXP Pro.
.NET development is available for Win2K and WinXP Pro, it might also be possible with NT4 but I'm not positive.
ASP.NET hosting can be done with Win2K and WinXP Pro.
James
Sonork ID: 100.11138 - Hasaki
"I left there in the morning
with their God tucked underneath my arm
their half-assed smiles and the book of rules.
So I asked this God a question
and by way of firm reply,
He said - I'm not the kind you have to wind up on Sundays."
"Wind Up" from Aqualung, Jethro Tull 1971
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Let me make it clear for myself:
James T. Johnson wrote:
.NET is available for NT4, Win98, Win98SE, WinME, Win2K, WinXP Home, and WinXP Pro.
It means I can run my applications in those OS.
James T. Johnson wrote:
.NET development is available for Win2K and WinXP Pro, it might also be possible with NT4 but I'm not positive.
This means I can write for example C# or VB.NET codes only in those one.
James T. Johnson wrote:
ASP.NET hosting can be done with Win2K and WinXP Pro.
I know this one.;)
Mazy
"So,so you think you can tell,
Heaven from Hell,
Blue skies from pain,...
How I wish,how I wish you were here." Wish You Were Here-Pink Floyd-1975
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