|
|
Also me (based on project)
A. Riazi
|
|
|
|
|
|
Me too!
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Memory leaks is the price we pay \0
01234567890123456789012345678901234
|
|
|
|
|
|
Sure, I'll help. Depends on what I'll have to do, tho .
Regards,
Vikram.
-----------------------------
My site due for a massive update.
"it is in your best interest to begin a serious study of classic Visual Basic. Nothing will help you in achieving your goals so well as mastering this wonderful language and it's design philosophies." - Shog9
"Do not give redundant error messages again and again." - A classmate of mine, while giving a class talk on error detection in compiler design.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
empty message
rely to this if you have an idea
Jason Henderson My articles
"The best argument against democracy is a five-minute conversation with the average voter." - Winston Churchill
|
|
|
|
|
Write a C# book with source code and examples from CodeProject
jhaga
CodeProject House, Paul Watson wrote:
...and the roar of John Simmons own personal Nascar in the garage. Meg flitting about taking photos.Chris having an heated arguement with Colin Davies and .S.Rod. over egian values. Nish manically typing *censur*. Duncan racing around after his pet *c.* Michael Martin and Bryce loudly yelling *c.* C.G. having a fit as Roger Wright loads up *c.* . Anna waving her *c.* and Deb scoffing chocolates in the corner.
...Good heavens!
|
|
|
|
|
How about writing a CodeProject book about programming desktop applications in .NET? The book would give you a good foundational understanding of how to use the main features/technologies of .NET & its BCL.
Books that use the step-by-step approach sometimes just give you the steps, but don't tell you enough about why the steps should be taken and what they do, etc. Then there are the books that give you facts, put don't give you an example of applying them in a practical way. What I'd like to do is use a step-by-step approach, but explain the why's and how's along the way.
Here's a sampling of topics. If enough people want this, we can make a more final list in an article.
[asterisks denote topics I'd be willing to write for]
BEGINNER:
Console Apps *
Clipboard Handling
Printing **
Using the standard .NET controls
Delegates & Events **
XML ***
Resources**
Fonts and Text ***
File IO
INTERMEDIATE:
Sorting in .NET
Registry
Serialization *
Graphics/Drawing ***
COM Interop **
Shell Extensions *
Data access
Collections ***
Threading *
Remoting
Attributes
SubClassing ***
Globalization/Localization
Reflection **
The list above leaves some topics out. If there is a topic not listed that you'd really like to write for, go ahead and mention it.
"Do unto others as you would have them do unto you." - Jesus
"An eye for an eye only makes the whole world blind." - Mahatma Gandhi
|
|
|
|
|
Molecular graphics program for visualising molecule structures
CodeProject House, Paul Watson wrote:
...and the roar of John Simmons own personal Nascar in the garage. Meg flitting about taking photos.Chris having an heated arguement with Colin Davies and .S.Rod. over egian values. Nish manically typing *censur*. Duncan racing around after his pet *c.* Michael Martin and Bryce loudly yelling *c.* C.G. having a fit as Roger Wright loads up *c.* . Anna waving her *c.* and Deb scoffing chocolates in the corner.
...Good heavens!
|
|
|
|
|
Odd that I should find a posting for this here. I'd be willing to work
on this one. I already have code for this (well a start anyways). I benched
it some time ago, however.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Designing intelligence requires the designers to have some of their own.
"I have a strange ginger man living on my roof!"
"One of the most important things you learn from the internet is that there is no ‘them’ out there. It’s just an awful lot of ‘us’."
-Douglas Adams
Jonathan 'nonny' Newman
Homepage [www.nonny.com] [^]
|
|
|
|
|
|
My point exactly
"I have a strange ginger man living on my roof!"
"One of the most important things you learn from the internet is that there is no ‘them’ out there. It’s just an awful lot of ‘us’."
-Douglas Adams
Jonathan 'nonny' Newman
Homepage [www.nonny.com] [^]
|
|
|
|
|
|
Yeah an AI project is the way to go.
I don't want to appear rude to other devs.
But nobody in the real world really knows what GDI is about.
AI is well respected by the common folk.
Regardz
Colin J Davies
* WARNING * This could be addictive The minion's version of "Catch "
It's a real shame that people as stupid as you can work out how to use a computer. said by Christian Graus in the Soapbox
|
|
|
|
|
|
Or C&C, AOM, or UO? The key to a game is a good story! Any writers in the house willing to write a story? The story is what glues everything together.
|
|
|
|
|
Since this is a CodeProject project, why not make it something directly related to CodeProject? (utilities for better communication between CPians, developer utilities/plugins for directly grabbing content from CodeProject, code/tools to enhance the usability of the site itself (per Chris' approval)).
Idea
A client program that monitors all new/updated posts, articles, etc. then lets you browse them at your leasure (without depending upon the cookie that gets confused as to whether you actually read something or not).
This same program would also have a CodeProject-specific chat client built-in.
It could also use a sophisticated article submission handler to ensure good formatting, and prevent some of the potential problems where web browsers lose data in the event of an error.
Etc.
John
|
|
|
|
|
John Fisher wrote:
A client program that monitors all new/updated posts, articles, etc. then lets you browse them at your leasure (without depending upon the cookie that gets confused as to whether you actually read something or not).
Well, there's the new RSS feed plus some existing (OK, using cookies I guess), message monitors.
John Fisher wrote:
This same program would also have a CodeProject-specific chat client built-in.
On the humorous side, I already spend too much time reading the messages and replying to them. I'd NEVER get anything done with a live chat system. Plus I guess a lot of people already use existing chat technologies.
John Fisher wrote:
It could also use a sophisticated article submission handler to ensure good formatting
I typically write everything in FrontPage and do the final touch up in the editor that CP already has, which is really cool. That way, I don't mind if the browser crashes.
Hope you don't mind the feedback--it would be interesting to further develop these ideas so we're not duplicating existing work.
Marc
Help! I'm an AI running around in someone's f*cked up universe simulator. Sensitivity and ethnic diversity means celebrating difference, not hiding from it. - Christian Graus Every line of code is a liability - Taka Muraoka Microsoft deliberately adds arbitrary layers of complexity to make it difficult to deliver Windows features on non-Windows platforms--Microsoft's "Halloween files"
|
|
|
|
|
Thanks for the comments. I was basically throwing out ideas to spur thought, with the goal of a single app (or very closely related group of apps) that would be CP specific. Right now, we can do most of these things, but they're disjointed and not all of them are as powerful as they could be with an locally hosted application (client).
If anyone has other ideas for adding to this "suite" concept, just think along the lines of what everyone likes to already do at CP, but make it easier.
John
|
|
|
|