I find Regular Expression powerful but difficult. Eric Gunnerson wrote the Regular Expression Workbench. This makes them easy.
It's a tool to create, test, and study regular expressions with this workbench. With the "Examine-o-matic" feature, hover over the regex to decode what it means
.NET Framework Service Pack 2
I have found a class that allows for balloon shaped forms in .NET.
Have a look at CodeProject.
Most commercial WinForm applications have a SplashScreen. This article explains how you can implement one using the Microsoft .NET Framework.
Example: Visual Studio.NET SplashScreen
I have found the opensource project/tool NDoc which compiles the C# Xml Documentation to MSDN like help file.
It works great!
I don't like COM+. I have never liked it but I had to use it when I needed Distributed Transactions. At the Teched 2002 in Barcelona I learned how you can use Distributed Transactions without COM+.
My problem with COM+ is the fact that you only can choose one transactiontype for a class. You can not differentiate it per method.
Download the following Zip file and have a look at Ron Jacobs example project and slides.
Be carefull, this only works on Windows XP. It uses some lowlevel COM+ 1.5 features.
Printing in .NET is greatly improved when compared with Visual Basic 6.0. In my projects I almost never use external reporting tools like Crystal Reports. They are too large and complex for my needs. In this article I demonstrate the use of the ReportLibrary which I developed. It can be used to create simple reports which can be printed and previewed.
I own a Pocket PC since a few months. It's a nice peace of hardware although I didn't use it much. There wasn't much practical use for it. Now I have decided to write my own Time Registration and maybe my own Car Mileage Administration application. In both Smart Device Applications I have to enter a Time regullary. Microsoft didn't supply me with a good control for this so I decided to write one.
Writing a Smart Device Applications is made easy with the introduction of Visual Studio.NET 2003 and the .NET Compact Framework. In this article I describe how I have written a TimeBox control for the Pocket PC. It's not much different from a normal Windows Forms control.
TimeBox Sample running in the Pocket PC Emulator
I plan to use this TimeBox in my application so I have placed it in an separate project. Due to the low memory footprint you also have to create a designer able version of it. This version will have extra design-time only code (methods and attributes).
I used to program in Visual Basic 6.0. It is a great tool but not perfect. It was lacking some crucial controls. A Splitter control was one of them. Microsoft has added it to the .NET framework (thanks) but forgot to make it easy to use. You must place it on a Form, set some properties for it and then also some (Dock) properties of the other two controls. Then you have to set the order of the controls correctly by using 'Bring to Front' or 'Send to Back'.
This article demonstrates the use of a simple AddSplitter() method which simplifies the use of splitters.