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@!#$*&@$*&!@#$ I made a mistake!
I was incorrect when I said that the SDK would run on 98/ME, it too requires 2K/XP.
I confused myself, the SDK will run on NT4, but ASP.NET requires 2K to work. I switched NT4 with 98/ME and ASP.NET with VS.NET.
Sorry for the confusion,
James
Sonork ID: 100.11138 - Hasaki
"Not be to confused with 'The VD Project'. Which would be a very bad pr0n flick. " - Michael P Butler Jan. 18, 2002
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Will the final release of VS.NET use Product Activation like Windows XP ?
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Hello;
I'm in trouble with .NET framework when i want to build and browse a new created empty aspx page. I'm getting following message;
Server Error in '/myaspx' Application.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Parser Error
Description: An error occurred during the parsing of a resource required to service this request. Please review the following specific parse error details and modify your source file appropriately.
Parser Error Message: The 'Inherits' attribute is not supported by the 'application' directive.
Source Error:
Line 1: <%@ Application Codebehind="Global.asax.vb" Inherits="myaspx.Global" %>
Source File: c:\inetpub\wwwroot\myaspx\global.asax Line: 1
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------Version Information: Runtime Build:1.0.2914.16; ASP.NET Build:1.0.2914.16
How can i solve that problem. Anybody help me?
Thank you...
OGED
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I am looking at the prices for VS.NET, and as a student, well. I cant really afford $999 USD for the full install, or the ~$499 for the upgrade. I was just wondering if anyone knows if MicroSoft will have any student discounts like they have had in the past? I picked up VC++ 6.0 rather cheaply awhile ago.
While I could simply by VC++ .NET, as I can afford that, I would also like to get C#/etc to I can work on learning those new technologies aswell.
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I would assume that they would give academic pricing. I haven't seen much of anything that would lead me to believe otherwise.
I myself will be looking forward to reduced pricing
Make sure you check your bookstore to see if they give any steeper discounts, from what others have told me certain colleges get lots of MS software for a few dollars each [IIRC, Texas State gets Office XP for $15].
HTH,
James
[Too lazy to sign in :p]
Sonork: 100.11138 - Hasaki
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I remember seeing somewhere that the student version of VS.NET will be $200, but I can't remember if that was US Dollars
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Check out needsoftware.com, it seems that you can All of VS.NET for something like $115.
But it seems that I am not allowed (as an 8th grade student) the discount? Does that seem slightly unfair? Would it be legal if one of my teachers acted as an intermediate and bought it for me?
-Domenic Denicola-
Geek^n
http://madhamster.50megs.com
"Any technology that is indistinguishable from magic is insufficiently advanced..."
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Hello,
There has one amazing feature of .Net that was highlighted in the .Net show titled “.Net does windows” however its been very hard to find articles relating to this.
The topic in question is what was termed as the “.Net Smart Client Deployable Model”. It’s a scheme where assemblies for you application can be downloaded automatically as new versions are released.
Now I am pretty big on P2P development and I realize that getting an assembly from a web server 1000s of miles away might not be the best thing when the guy in the next cubicles already got it.
What I would really like to know is, how the “.Net Smart Client Deployable Model” can be extended to P2P in the sense mentioned above. The only limitation so far has been that, there has to be webservice involved at the place where the new assemblies are. (that wouldn’t work under p2p, so if anyone has any ideas pls let me know)
This is a bit important to me right now!
- Tariq
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Hi guys,
I have installed .NET Beta 2 and I am having a little bit of a problem...
I am running XP Home Edition, which installed ok and runs very well. However I don't have any form of Personal Web Server or IIS installed. I am familiar with PWS from windows 98 and IIS in relation to NT 4.0.
Question is should I really switch from the Home Edition of XP to the Pro version? Or is there something I can download/buy to install a Web Server on my machine?
I really am eager to play around with .NET, as I am a freelancer who needs to keep up-to-date with this stuff.
Hope someone can help out,
Nick Lewis
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TRy downloading Xitami web server [it's free]
I am not sure it supports ASP though. Maybe it has some module to support ASP
Nish
Sonork ID 100.9786 voidmain
www.busterboy.org
If you don't find me on CP, I'll be at Bob's HungOut
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Thanks for the info Nish, I shall try Xitami out...
I have done some research and for the benefit of everyone here...
XP Home Edition doesn't have PWS or IIS you must either buy Pro in the first place or upgrade to it.
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As you found, IIS only comes with XP Pro. I don't think you can do ASP.NET applications without IIS though.
I've seen a few mentions of doing remoting without IIS, but I don't think I've seen anything for ASP.NET.
A quick search on the DOTNET mailing list turned up no matches, but there are some combinations I didn't try out.
James
Sonork ID: 100.11138 - Hasaki
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Thanks for your help everyone. I am going to have to upgrade to Pro.
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I am not a top-notch super programmer, simply a high school student finishing his last year before going off to Univeristy. I have a working knowledge of MFC, and have wrote a few custom apps for my school board. I still have ALOT to learn (I dont know COM/ATL/etc), but .NET seems to be the buzz-word of the day. I have read up on it, and various posts here, and on the microsoft website and various other resources, but I still have a big question mark over my head - "whats the point? why?".
The main problem is, I cant seem to wrap my head around a situation in which using .NET would be best, and how it would be done, and why.
So, lets take my current project for example. All I need to do, is pretty much make up a basic front end to a database that lets two people add/edit/modify, generate a report/search/printout information relating to applicants for a job. Not all that fancy, and the way I am approaching it now (not using .NET/etc) is working just fine. I made the program before, but wasnt happy with how it turned out, so I am simply re-doing it from scratch.
In reality, this will only be used by 2 users, 3 max at a single time, and the demands are rather low. But for the sake of example, could someone explain how I could use .NET with this application? (3 or so clients accessing a centralized database on a seperate server), and what benifits I would have in doing so?
Or any application of .NET, ie: purpose of the application, why .NET, what advantages does .NET give? With it being Microsoft, it is pretty much follow the leader or get left behind, and I'd much rather not get trampled and out-dated before leaving the safe walls of highschool by not keeping up with the times.
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An example I see off the top of my head would have the centralized server hosting a remoting component which a thin-client would tie into. All the thin-client would need is the .NET runtime, and a bit of code to glue together the remoting components and the UI.
All of the real code would be running on the server.
Then you put up a .NET enabled website where you tie into those same components and just re-create the UI. And then you offer some webservices so other companies/just yourself can use an internet enabled program to tie into the database as well.
Thats how I see it anyway
James
Sonork ID: 100.11138 - Hasaki
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.NET is a new Microsoft way of making server-side apps, especially web-services. If you are interested in server-side programming for Windows, this is the way to go.
I vote pro drink
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I wish that would have come to mind when I wrote my reply; a lot less typing and much clearer.
James
Sonork ID: 100.11138 - Hasaki
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Thanks for the reply (both who replied). Helps (sorta) clear things up, far more then the 10 page long articles that I have sorted though trying to make heads and tails of things.
I was wondering if you knew of an example that I could find that made a web-service that for example, would query a database (or anything), and how to make a web client in VC++ to access/make use of that service? Or point me to a resource where I can find out how.
VC++ is what I am most familiar with. Not looking for a "code it for me", but just a spot to look in the right direction, I was fiddling around with some examples, but as I dont know C# or ASP, and most of the examples are relating to them, I was sorta flounding.
Now that I have a better idea, I think I have an idea of how to make use of .NET for some side projects of mine that I have been playing with.
Thanks again.
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Hello;
I'm in trouble with .NET framework. I want to build and browse a new created empty aspx page. I'm getting following message;
Server Error in '/myaspx' Application.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Parser Error
Description: An error occurred during the parsing of a resource required to service this request. Please review the following specific parse error details and modify your source file appropriately.
Parser Error Message: The 'Inherits' attribute is not supported by the 'application' directive.
Source Error:
Line 1: <%@ Application Codebehind="Global.asax.vb" Inherits="myaspx.Global" %>
Source File: c:\inetpub\wwwroot\myaspx\global.asax Line: 1
--------------------------------------------------------------------------Version Information: Runtime Build:1.0.2914.16; ASP.NET Build:1.0.2914.16
How can i solve that problem. Anybody help me?
Thank you...
Ahmet Orkun GEDiK
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Guys,
I am having problems with the use of the CacheItemRemovedCallback event within an ASP.NET/C# website I am building. The below code is from my global.aspx file. The code loads XML/XSL objects into the Cache for later use. I also create a Cache dependency so should any files change which my XML/XSL objects use, the Cache is updated automatically. The code works only when something is removed from the Cache by another aspx file, since the code correctly identifies the HttpContext. However, when one of my files is changed and the RemovedCallback() function is fired, for some reason the Context and the HttpContext are both null. As such my code never has a chance to update the Cache again. Rather it exists "without an error" as soon as I try to use Cache.Insert. Does anyone know if this is a bug in Beta 2, or am I missing something, like the use of a special Context object?
Any help greatly appreciated..........
Cheers,
Tim.
<%@ Import Namespace="System.Xml.Xsl" %>
<%@ Import Namespace="System.Xml.XPath" %>
<%@ Import Namespace="System.Web.Caching" %>
<%@ Import Namespace="CommerceEngine.Common" %>
private static CacheItemRemovedCallback onRemove = null;
private XPathDocument CommerceListXmlObj;
private XslTransform CommerceListXslObj;
public void Application_OnStart()
{
ApplicationConfiguration.OnApplicationStart(Context.Server.MapPath( Context.Request.ApplicationPath ));
onRemove = new CacheItemRemovedCallback(this.RemovedCallback);
CommerceListXmlObj = new XPathDocument(CommerceEngineConfiguration.CommerceListXmlFilePath);
HttpContext.Current.Cache.Insert("CommerceListXmlObj", CommerceListXmlObj, new CacheDependency (CommerceEngineConfiguration.CommerceListXmlFilePath), DateTime.Now.AddHours(1), TimeSpan.Zero, CacheItemPriority.Default, CacheItemPriorityDecay.Slow, onRemove );
CommerceListXslObj = new XslTransform();
CommerceListXslObj.Load(CommerceEngineConfiguration.CommerceListXslFilePath);
HttpContext.Current.Cache.Insert("CommerceListXslObj", CommerceListXslObj, new CacheDependency(CommerceEngineConfiguration.CommerceListXslFilePath), DateTime.Now.AddHours(1), TimeSpan.Zero, CacheItemPriority.Default, CacheItemPriorityDecay.Slow, onRemove );
}
public void RemovedCallback(String k, Object v, CacheItemRemovedReason r)
{
switch(k)
{
case "CommerceListXmlObj" :
CommerceListXmlObj = new XPathDocument(CommerceEngineConfiguration.CommerceListXmlFilePath);
HttpContext.Current.Cache.Insert("CommerceListXmlObj", CommerceListXmlObj, new CacheDependency(CommerceEngineConfiguration.CommerceListXmlFilePath), DateTime.Now.AddHours(1), TimeSpan.Zero, CacheItemPriority.Default, CacheItemPriorityDecay.Slow, onRemove );
break;
}
}
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Hi folks,
Lately I have been spending some time attempting to get my head around ASP.NET. One on the exercises I have set myself is to build a modest little website. But I have run into a few design problems that I hope some one can help me with.
I have decided to have a standard header to each page. (Just like code project has the standard header at the top of this page.) In pure ASP I would have had these as a SSI (eg .
In ASP.NET this still works but when I attempt to add make the header a bit smarter by making it a WebForm things get all confused. This happens because they are each seperate pages with seperate C# code behind them. Which means there is two <@ Page ...> directives. Which means it doesn't work!
What is the proper design pattern/model to acheive this type of behaviour?
I hope this makes sense to you all...
Matt
------
Accept that some days you are the pigeon and some days the statue.
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I think the ASP.NET way would be to create a new server control encapsulating the header.
A lot more info on doing such a thing can be gleaned from the IBuySpy set of websites.
HTH,
James
Sonork ID: 100.11138 - Hasaki
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thanks for the tip. I am having a look at ibuyspy right now!
Matt
------
Accept that some days you are the pigeon and some days the statue.
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There are 2 choices, you could compile your own control into a dll, or you could make a UserControl file, with an ascx extension.
Judging by the fact that you are making a header, i'm betting you want to make a UserControl, which is much like the old asp include file, except much much cooler.
here's the msdn docs on UserControls, ( watch for wrapping )
http://msdn.microsoft.com/library/?url=/library/en-us/cpref/html/cpref_start.asp?frame=true
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Thanks for the help. Much appreciated. I am experimenting with them at the moment.
Matt
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Accept that some days you are the pigeon and some days the statue.
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