The views expressed on this weblog are mine alone and do not necessarily reflect the views of my employer.
 Tuesday, October 15, 2002

XML Spy Visual Studio.NET Integration Add-in Beta 2 (201kB)

Download the XML Spy Visual Studio.NET Integration Add-in Beta. The Add-in allows you to use XML SPY Features directly within Visual Studio.NET. (This add-in requires Visual Studio.NET and XML Spy Suite 4.3)
[Peter Stanski]

Now THIS is something special! The question now is do I use this Add-In, or stick with the glorious Visual XSLT from ActiveState.  I shall install and explore...


Updated Link to this post 11:36:56 PM  #    comment []  trackback []

A picture named SoapExtWiz.JPGIt's a 0.1 version! Don't expect miracles!

Here's the C# wizard for ASP.NET Soap Extensions.

What works: It'll generate a compiling SoapExtension that will exactly do nothing. However, the code should have all the hooks to get started.

What doesn't work: (a) You need to click on "Application Options" once to initialize the settings correctly. (b) I haven't had the time to test all option combinations. (c) Any project name that isn't a single word will likely cause the wizard to create garbage. (d) The namespace from the project settings page isn't picked up. (e) Probably several bugs in the template code.

Purpose: Demonstrates that custom stuff can be plugged into VS.NET. Makes creating full SOAP Extensions a bit easier and helps understanding how they are built.

What to do with it: If you need adjustments, poke around in the wizard's templates1033 subdir.

How to install: Unpack the archive, read the readme.txt. It's just three steps. Unpack an archive, copy one file, edit one file. Once that's done, start VS.NET and try.

And as always: It may just not work for you. If that's the case, mail me.

[Clemens Vasters: Enterprise Development & Alien Abductions]

Once again, my main man Clemens proves that he's the hardest working man in show business.


Updated Link to this post 11:17:47 PM  #    comment []  trackback []

Ken Bereskin talks about my favorite feature in Jaguar. The Archive Install always tickles me, since it saves a lot of time. Could Microsoft ever come close to something like this? Probably not, because user stuff is still half in the registry, half on the hard drive. Plus, Microsoft is still working on what they call "xcopy deployment," something that we call "dragging shit from a disk image to your Applications folder and having it just work." [Brian Jepson's Radio Weblog]

Fabulous...ROTFLMAO


Updated Link to this post 11:28:05 AM  #    comment []  trackback []