Popular Articles
Learn how to automate custom SharePoint application deployments, use the SharePoint API, and avoid the hassle of custom site definitions.
By E. Wilansky, P. Olszewski, and R. Sneddon (May 2008)
OBA solution patterns help architects and developers build Office Business Applications (OBAs). This article introduces the seven core OBA solution patterns and applies one to a real-world problem.
By Steve Fox (March 2008)
Here the author uses Document Information Panels in the Microsoft 2007 Office system to manipulate metadata from Office docs for better discovery and management.
By Ashish Ghoda (April 2008)
Joel Pobar presents an introduction to how compilers work and how you can write your own compiler to target the .NET Framework.
By Joel Pobar (February 2008)
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The May 2008 issue of MSDN Magazine is now available online. Our May issue starts with a focus on developing Office-based business applications based on SharePoint. We also delve into the details of development language ...
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In the March 2008 installment of our Extreme ASP.NET column, Fritz Onion introduced to the ASP.NET 3.5 ListView control, which provides more control over generated markup, support for paging, and full integration with the data source-based binding model. In the April ...
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The need to test a program that accesses and manipulates a back-end SQL Server database is very common. In many such cases, the application interacts with the back-end data through the use of SQL stored procedures. In the April 2008 issue of MSDN Magazine, James ...
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The Microsoft Office platform allows you to maintain both standard and custom properties for documents. Document Information Panels, however, let you implement additional functionality such as metadata-based search and automation of information-driven business processes is Office documents and SharePoint apps. In the April 2008 issue of MSDN ...
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Going Places is a new MSDN Magazine column devoted to mobile device development. The main focus will be on Windows Mobile phones and Tablet PCs, although any topic related to mobility is fair game. In the April 2008 issue of MSDN ...
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Silverlight is a new cross-browser plug-in from Microsoft that brings the power of the .NET Framework to bear on an area that was previously reserved for Flash or Java Applets. Silverlight also supports a range of .NET-compliant languages, including Visual Basic and C#, so you don't have to learn a new language to build rich media applications. In the April 2008 issue ...
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