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If you have, or know of a tool, that you would like us to talk about on this site feel free to leave a comment here with a link and description for your favorite tool or use the contact form for our blog.
We reserve the right not to link to your tool. You may also have to give us some time before we post about your tool since we could imagine the volume might be really high. :-)
Comments
- Anonymous
April 21, 2004
I posted this message on the VS.NET message board already, but this may be a more appropriate place.
Some of you may be interested in a tool I recently posted to Workspaces, that is intended to make working with custom configuration sections as painless as possible.
http://www.gotdotnet.com/Community/Workspaces/workspace.aspx?id=d7cfbcd5-5963-45db-9755-17dc429164bb
It takes as input a simple XML file that describes the schema of a custom configuration section, and it generates an IConfigurationSectionHandler implementation that will parse the custom section from the configuration file. Additionally it generates simple value classes that provide strongly typed access to the configuration data. After running the installer, look in the installation directory for the documentation.
The tool is a VS Custom Tool (like the MS data set generator that generates typed data sets), so it integrates quite nicely with Visual Studio (2003).
-John - Anonymous
May 07, 2004
The comment has been removed - Anonymous
May 14, 2004
Hi there ,
I would like to be a member.
behrooz - Anonymous
May 21, 2004
Hiya. :)
Just in case you're not aware of it I've a free VS.NET 2002/2003 add-in (ResOrg.NET) for dealing with resource ID conflicts in MFC projects.
We're just about to move to VS.NET 2003 at work (finally!) so I'm hoping to start adding more features to take advantage of the extensibility interface.
Have a look and see what you think. :)
http://www.codeproject.com/macro/resorg.asp. - Anonymous
May 31, 2004
Very good - Anonymous
June 03, 2004
thank u - Anonymous
July 06, 2004
Spices.VSIP.Net delivers full features set of Spices.Net into Visual Studio, now you can expand you development - analyze, build, obfuscate, debug, verify and deploy your apps with Spices.Net.
For more details please visit http://9rays.net/products/spices - Anonymous
July 13, 2004
I know this tool is used in a few different companies to extend the VS.NET IDE - but it is primarily used to help write Code Docs. The aim of it is to really provide a quick and easy way to add functionality to any location within VS.NET and the Code Docs and other tools are examples of these. - Anonymous
July 19, 2004
Hi , everyone :
I kown a tool that convert vb and vb.net project to c#.
you can download free demo version.
For more detials visit http://www.e-iceblue.com - Anonymous
August 03, 2004
The comment has been removed