Managed.com Blog Asp.net 5 For Mac

Managed.com Blog Asp.net 5 For Mac Average ratng: 3,6/5 5556 reviews

A Mac user - Thursday, July 9, 2009 7:46:01 PM; @mac user: it's a normal font? I wasn't aware that this page uses a stylesheet with a font that wasn't available anywhere else. (I based the style on an existing style of this blogengine here at asp.net). I'll check if I can change it. FF 3.5 seems to suffer from the slowdown delay only on windows. According to Asp.net it is as follows: ASP.NET 5 is a new open-source and cross-platform framework for building modern cloud-based Web applications using.NET. It built from the ground up to provide an optimized development framework for apps that are either deployed to the cloud or run on-premises.

I really enjoyed your presentation today. Also, nice blurb about contributing to docs.asp.net. Scanjet 2400 driver. It's definitely a (fairly) easy way to get started.

This week I went to the docs to help set something up and realized it was wrong and outdated. So, I went through Steve Smith's video and got everything set up. I made my very first contribution to an open source project! This morning my pull request was accepted and merged!

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Now that I'm set up it will be easy to contribute more. Besides, the article I just updated probably needs to be updated to RC1 now! Hi Scott, I would like to make a request for another blog post. I don't like so much that dnvm relies heavily on the user profile's location. In my case I have to work with dnvm with several profiles and I would like to rely on only one installation of the environments and the caches for the different user profile I use on the same machine. Would you elaborate a method in order to achieve this.

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I would really appreciate as you always find the right way to do that type of improvement. Thanks in advance for taking my request in consideration Frederic. I've been messing around with ASP.net 5 and I really like a lot of things. For instance, it was a great idea to create a wwwroot directory for all the client images, scripts, stylesheets, etc.

The view imports file, and Task runners were also a great idea. Love having a lean production environment.

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Once you get everything configured properly, it is awesome. However, it sure seems like I'm doing a lot of things manually that used to be scaffolded. For example, you used to be able to right-click on a controller action and select 'Create View'. Now you have to manually create the folder structure and manually create the view file; keyboard shortcuts are quickly becoming my friends:) It is also annoying that Visual Studio 'forgets' my NPM and Bower configuration files after closing the project.

You have to 'View All Files' to access them after re-opening your solution. Maybe this is because the Bower Package Manager GUI is going to be the preferred method and there will be a NPM GUI? What I've found is that the Bower GUI doesn't include all the packages and actually takes longer to load/find things than manually editing the file with IntelliSense. Also, it seems like a lot of the NPM packages for Grunt and Gulp don't want to play nice with Windows (long file names/paths) and Visual Studio.

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Visual Studio frequently crashes when adding Gulp packages. While I prefer the code-based pipe approach that Gulp offers, I've gone back to using Grunt since it doesn't seem to crash the IDE.

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