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Hello?
Does anybody know where I can find VSS in the .NET studio. Kinda lost it .
Thanks a lot in advance!
Matthias
--------
In theory, there is no difference between theory and practice. In practice, however, there is.
(unknown author)
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http://www.codeproject.com/info/vsnet/versions.asp
Visual Sourcesafe Server isn't included in the Professional version of Visual Studio .NET. In the enterprise architect / developer versions you can find the installation of the server on CD 6 (I believe).
When you just want to use the client, look at File -> Source Control.
Succes!
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Can I integrate the VSS of VS6.0 into VS.NET ?Because I only get CD 1-4 of Enterprise
I'm amumu, and you?
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Yes, you can - at least, VSS 'just worked' in VS.Net Professional for me - I already had it installed with VS.6, installed VS.Net alongside & it all works. The integration does seem kinda different in some ways, though (like the VS.Net IDE c/f VC++6, really...).
Stuart Dootson
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MS Toolbar Control in mscomctl.ocx has a HotImageList property where as the .NET ToolBar doesn't. Are there any disadvantages or problems using the MS Toolbar Control, or any other COM Components and distributing the mscomctl.ocx with my .NET application?
Jerzy
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This puzzles me too. But since they brought XP out, they have sorta abandoned the cold/hot image list stuff from toolbars. For example IE 6 on XP does not use cold and hot image lists. Maybe they feel it's a dumb feature.
Nish
Regards,
Nish
Native CPian.
Born and brought up on CP.
With the CP blood in him.
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Agree, but what about using other OCXes, or using DLLs or unsafe code. Should we totally avoid using them and stick only with managed code?
Jerzy
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JerzyPeter wrote:
Should we totally avoid using them and stick only with managed code?
Not at all! The .NET framework is still incomplete in various areas. There is nothing wrong in invoking the API
Nish
Regards,
Nish
Native CPian.
Born and brought up on CP.
With the CP blood in him.
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Hello,
I am starting to learn the .NET stuff and I have the following questions:
1. Are the executables produced by .NET native code are they binary interpretated (like java .class files)
2. How much overhead does the garbage collection produce? (in terms of speed and memory)
3. If I am using Managed C++ can I manually delete pointers from an unmanaged code?
Thanks!
Best regards,
Alexandru Savescu
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Alexpro wrote:
1. Are the executables produced by .NET native code are they binary interpretated (like java .class files)
A little of both. .NET code is run through a JIT compilation, where the MSIL is converted into x86 code. This can happen in two different ways. First is when you just run the application, it will compile each method as its executed (each method is only compiled once). Second there is an install-time JIT utility called ngen . ngen will do the compile on the client system.
The reason it is called install time is the way that it works, the x86 code isn't placed in the binary but in a special location in the system; so you can't run ngen on your program then ship it, you have to do it when the program is installed on the client system.
Alexpro wrote:
2. How much overhead does the garbage collection produce? (in terms of speed and memory)
That all depends on the type of application you are writing. A typical database frontend application won't see any difference; a raytracing application will probably see a large difference. There is an article on CP in the .NET section that goes into very good detail about the garbage collection algorithm.
Alexpro wrote:
3. If I am using Managed C++ can I manually delete pointers from an unmanaged code?
YES! You have to Anything that is unmanaged you must take care of yourself, that includes system resources too (files, sockets, handles, etc). .NET provides wrappers for many system resources, and each one of those implements IDisposable so that you can free the resources ASAP.
HTH,
James
Simplicity Rules!
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Hello everybody!
I'm just wandering what one needs to do to distribute an application written in C# to a client machine which hasn't got the .NET installed.
Do you have a link to where I can learn more about this or does anybody have experiences in distributing the .Net framework?
Thx a lot!
Matthias
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Matthias Steinbart wrote:
I'm just wandering what one needs to do to distribute an application written in C# to a client machine which hasn't got the .NET installed.
No,This is not possible.You have to install it there.
Mazy
"The more I search, the more my need
For you,
The more I bless, the more I bleed
For you."The Outlaw Torn-Metallica
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Hi Mazy,
sorry for not being precise enough with my question. What I'd like to know is what is required to install the .NET framework on the target computer. How do you do this. Is there a ready packed .NET setup from Microsoft which you just include with your setup? Or do you have to roll your own?
Thx again!
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Matthias Steinbart wrote:
Is there a ready packed .NET setup from Microsoft which you just include with your setup? Or do you have to roll your own?
No,you have to install it yourself seprately from your software.You can download it from M$ site(its free;) )
Mazy
"The more I search, the more my need
For you,
The more I bless, the more I bleed
For you."The Outlaw Torn-Metallica
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Do you have a link?
<being lazy="" to="" search="">
Thx,
Matthias
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I think this is what you want.
Mazy
"The more I search, the more my need
For you,
The more I bless, the more I bleed
For you."The Outlaw Torn-Metallica
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There should be a merge module somewhere which you can use if you have a Windows Installer based setup. This will let you install the framework from within your setup program.
On my computer this file is located at c:\program files\common files\merge modules\dotnetfxredist_x86_enu.msm
HTH,
James
Simplicity Rules!
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How do you add the module in the setup project?
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There is a way in a deployment project in VS.NET that you can specify the framework must be installed before you install your app. Check the help for doc & syntax
Andrew Connell
IM on MSN
andrew@aconnell.com
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Using Deployment projects in Visual Studio.net you can pack de dotnet framework in your setup application. The Compiled installation application will take care of the install order.
Reality.sys is corrupted!
Reboot the universe Y/N?
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Thanks James and Mazy for the help. Now I got everything I need.
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I am writing a program that will use remoting, and I don't know which protocol to use. I understand that TCP/IP is faster, but to what extent (1.1x, 2x, 10x)? And how much more secure is HTTP?
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Sort of apples and oranges.
HTTP is built on top of TCP.
HTTP is a client/server protocol (request/response).
TCP is bidirectional after a connection is made.
TCP provides no security.
HTTP provides very primitive security.
Tim Smith
I know what you're thinking punk, you're thinking did he spell check this document? Well, to tell you the truth I kinda forgot myself in all this excitement. But being this here's CodeProject, the most powerful forums in the world and would blow your head clean off, you've got to ask yourself one question, Do I feel lucky? Well do ya punk?
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Tim Smith wrote:
Sort of apples and oranges.
HTTP is built on top of TCP.
Would I be right in saying that while HTTP is built on top of TCP/IP, HTTP can cross firewalls easilier than TCP/IP in the sense that the port for HTTP is almost always open.
Or maybe I should say: If I use TCP/IP directly as a comms protocol in an app will it be blocked "more" than HTTP, or, because HTTP is built on TCP/IP, there is no difference?
Or am I talking apples and oranges? Just thinking of some ideas and wondering what protocol to use for text messaging type comms.
regards,
Paul Watson
Bluegrass
Cape Town, South Africa
The greatest thing you'll ever learn is just to love, and to be loved in return - Moulin Rouge
Tim Smith wrote:
Over here in the third world of humor (a.k.a. BBC America),
peterchen wrote:
We should petition microsoft to a "target=_Paul" attribute.
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I can compile my project fine, but everytime I go to run my program from within the VS.NET IDE I get the messagebox that says
These project configuration(s) are out of date:
"ProjectName - Configuration Name"
Would you like to build them?
It says this for any build config. If I hit yes it'll recompile the resources, relink then start my program. I don't understand why this always happens even after just rebuilding my project. It doesn't happen with all my projects, and I haven't been able to find an option or anything to try changing.
Anyone have any ideas?
-Lunchy
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