All posts by Julie

Underscore-named variables and CLS Compliance in VB

When I moved to .NET from VB6, I loved the ability to name variables beginning with an underscore. Now that I am porting some .NET 1.1 code to .NET 2.0, I am seeing that this in non-CLS compliant.

However, because the handful of variables that use the underscore are in a class that has many subclasses and some of these variables are used in the subclasses (shared, protected) AND because this class is not something that anyone else will ever use outside of my application, I have made an executive decision NOT to fix the variables but to set the CLSCompliant attribute from the Assembly information to False.



Don’t Forget: www.acehaid.org

TabletPC Issue of CoDe Focus is online (and in hand)!!

I didn’t realize it was done yet as I hadn’t gotten the print copy. (Update: it arrived within a few  hours of posting this!!)

But the jam packed special issue of CoDe Mag, filled solely with Tablet and Mobile PC Articles, is online here!

There are articles by Markus Egger, Billy Hollis, Larry O’Brien, Dr. Neil, Ellen Whitney and myself. Also, there’s a forward by Frank Gozinski, from the Mobile Platforms Division of Microsoft. Additionally, there are quotes throughout from some of the key players at Microsoft in research and design of TabletPCs as well as the developer platform.

Here is the description from Frank’s blog:

Code Magazine has put together a complete end to end developer reference for building applications tuned for the Tablet PC and Mobile PC applications. Are you mobilizing your applications? With the continued move by customers who want anywhere access to their data and applications mobilizing software applications is taking on a new sense of urgency.  This Focus Issue of Code Magazine is a reference you’ll want to have and it’s free, check out the work Markus and company have done http://www.code-magazine.com/focus/TabletPC/ 

Happy reading (I really like the welcome letter)



Don’t Forget: www.acehaid.org

The mysterious return of my Pocket PC – after 18 months!

In June 2004, I returned from DevTeach in Montreal and couldn’t find my Pocket PC anywhere. I asked Marcie who I had shared my room with if she had found it. I called the hotel to see if it was still in the room. Nope. It did have a return address sticker on the back with my address and cell phone, so maybe just maybe…   Oh well.

Today I received a mysterious package from St. Louis, MO with no return address on it. In it? My pocket PC! One and a half years later.

Don’t Forget: www.acehaid.org

Tablet PC Development in Montreal (and playing hookey at the Fine Arts Museum)

On Monday night, I did a somewhat lengthy overview of developing software for Tablet PCs at GUVSM, one of the .NET groups in Montreal.. As I started the session, I learned that only one person in the room had ever seen a tablet pc, so I decided to spend a little time showing them a bit about the technology, otherwise developing inkable software wouldn’t make too much sense! I did the whole presentation in VS2005, which says a lot about the updated API working pretty well with VS2005. It was also a great exercise for me because I haven’t played with a great variety of functionality in a while and preparing the demos gave me an excuse to refresh my memory.

The meeting was sponsored by MSDN Canada, who covered my travel expenses and enabled me to stay overnight rather than do the 3 hour drive back home so late at night. Thanks to Sasha and Wendy from MSDN Canada and for Guy and Jean-Rene for bringing me up. Naturally, the meeting was followed by a late night dinner of smoked meat. Though we normally go to the all-time classic Ben’s, this time we went to Reuben’s. I always have a blast with these guys: Mario Cardinal, Jean-Rene Roy, Eric Cote and Etienne Tremblay. The biggest lesson of the night was to stay away from Bell as your ISV if you can and to befriend a geek who likes to keep up with the latest toys, so when they shed their antiques (like 2 month old cell phones) you might be first in line!

To top it off, before I drove back home Tuesday morning, I got to go see an exhibit that I have been wanting to get to: Right Under the Sun. Landscape in Provence, from Classicism to Modernism (1750–1920) at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts. Though attempting to view about 200 works of art in a mere 2 hours was a little quick, it was wonderful to see. Provence has a beautiful combination of landscapes – mountains, canyons, harbors, the sea – and it was a magnet for painters including those that are more commonly known, such as VanGogh, Cezanne, Monet, Georges Braque, Renoir. Some of the landscapes became familiar as many painters had captured them – most memorable were Mt. Saint-Victoire and a canyon whose name I can no longer remember. It was also fascinating to watch the styles evolve. Perhaps I’ll get up there one more time before the show ends in early January to linger a bit longer.

Don’t Forget: www.acehaid.org

ASP and VS Connections Spring 2006

I will be doing 4 [new] talks at Connections this spring. I was happy to learn that both Alex Homer and Dave Sussman will be also there this time. These guys are in the U.K. so they can’t always make it. Now to find a great sushi restaurant and see what other squiggly things I can talk Dave into trying!

Posted from BLInk!