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  • LLBLGen Pro v2.0 released!

    Whoa time flies! . After 9 months of hard work, LLBLGen Pro v2.0 has been released! LLBLGen Pro V2.0 comes with a new licensing scheme: it's now licensed per seat, instead of per-department. Current customers of v1.0.200x.y can upgrade for EUR 49.- per developer. (Designer using developers need a license...
    Posted to Frans Bouma's blog (Weblog) by FransBouma on 07-02-2006, 12:00 AM
    Filed under: LLBLGen Pro, Database / SQL Server, .NET General, O/R Mapping, General Software Development, Software Engineering, .NET, Advanced .NET
  • LLBLGen Pro v2.0 released!

    Whoa time flies! . After 9 months of hard work, LLBLGen Pro v2.0 has been released! LLBLGen Pro V2.0 comes with a new licensing scheme: it's now licensed per seat, instead of per-department. Current customers of v1.0.200x.y can upgrade for EUR 49.- per developer. (Designer using developers need a license...
    Posted to Frans Bouma's blog (Weblog) by FransBouma on 07-02-2006, 12:00 AM
    Filed under: .NET General, Database / SQL Server, Software Engineering, LLBLGen Pro, O/R Mapping, Advanced .NET, General Software Development, .NET
  • LLBLGen Pro v2.5 has been released!

    Back in January 2007 we started designing and developing LLBLGen Pro v2.5, and it's finally here! When you develop a framework, at a given moment in time you'll wonder: "Ok, now that I have all the basics covered, which direction shall I go into now, what are the more meaningfull additions to the framework...
    Posted to Frans Bouma's blog (Weblog) by FransBouma on 08-23-2007, 12:00 AM
    Filed under: .NET General, Database / SQL Server, Software Engineering, LLBLGen Pro, O/R Mapping, Advanced .NET, General Software Development, .NET
  • Developing Linq to LLBLGen Pro, part 10

    (This is part of an on-going series of articles, started here ) Whoa, almost a month without an update! The truth is that I wanted to finish GroupBy support before posting another article in this ongoing series, and it took almost 3 weeks to get it right. But more on that later, first some easy stuff...
    Posted to Frans Bouma's blog (Weblog) by FransBouma on 12-21-2007, 12:00 AM
    Filed under: .NET General, Database / SQL Server, Software Engineering, LLBLGen Pro, O/R Mapping, Advanced .NET, General Software Development, .NET, Linq, Linq to LLBLGen Pro
  • Developing Linq to LLBLGen Pro, part 8

    (This is part of an on-going series of articles, started here ) Today I managed to arrive back at the point I stopped with my current code base a couple of weeks ago to re-implement the expression tree reduction code. I'm not totally done with re-connecting the wires of the outer interface code to the...
    Posted to Frans Bouma's blog (Weblog) by FransBouma on 10-30-2007, 12:00 AM
    Filed under: .NET General, Software Engineering, LLBLGen Pro, O/R Mapping, Advanced .NET, General Software Development, .NET, Linq, Linq to LLBLGen Pro
  • Developing Linq to LLBLGen Pro, part 7

    (This is part of an on-going series of articles, started here ) Last time I talked about the switch to the approach where most Queryable extension methods should be seen as sets on their own. What happened after that? Well, initially, I continued on the path I had taken a few weeks ago: a stack based...
    Posted to Frans Bouma's blog (Weblog) by FransBouma on 10-28-2007, 12:00 AM
    Filed under: .NET General, Software Engineering, LLBLGen Pro, O/R Mapping, Advanced .NET, General Software Development, .NET, Linq, Linq to LLBLGen Pro
  • Developing Linq to LLBLGen Pro, part 6

    (This is part of an on-going series of articles, started here ) I switched to 'part' posts instead of 'day' posts, as I realized the initial plan (post every day) isn't that useful in this case ("Today I stared at 20 lines of code for 3 hours before I realized the ideas I had yesterday didn't work as...
    Posted to Frans Bouma's blog (Weblog) by FransBouma on 10-12-2007, 12:00 AM
    Filed under: .NET General, Software Engineering, LLBLGen Pro, O/R Mapping, Advanced .NET, General Software Development, .NET, Linq, Linq to LLBLGen Pro
  • Developing Linq to LLBLGen Pro, Day 5

    (This is part of an on-going series of articles, started here ) Consuming Expression trees, back to Special Case programming? I'll show you 5 different queries and what their expression tree looks like in text (tested on Linq to Sql, so you'll see Table references) Query A: // C# var q = from c in nw...
    Posted to Frans Bouma's blog (Weblog) by FransBouma on 10-03-2007, 12:00 AM
    Filed under: .NET General, Software Engineering, LLBLGen Pro, O/R Mapping, Advanced .NET, General Software Development, .NET, Linq, Linq to LLBLGen Pro
  • Developing Linq to LLBLGen Pro, Day 4

    (This is part of an on-going series of articles, started here ) I hear you thinking... "In the Netherlands, days apparently have 168 hours" . Well... no (really?). Today is officially my 4th day I work on Linq support. The past couple of days since the previous post I've been working on Derived Table...
    Posted to Frans Bouma's blog (Weblog) by FransBouma on 09-28-2007, 12:00 AM
    Filed under: .NET General, Software Engineering, LLBLGen Pro, O/R Mapping, Advanced .NET, General Software Development, .NET, Linq, Linq to LLBLGen Pro
  • Developing Linq to LLBLGen Pro, day 3

    (This is part of an on-going series of articles, started here ) In the previous post in this series, I discussed the problem of a select with aggregates using derived tables vs. a query which resulted in the same resultset but used a group by clause and my problem with formulating that simple group by...
    Posted to Frans Bouma's blog (Weblog) by FransBouma on 09-19-2007, 12:00 AM
    Filed under: .NET General, Software Engineering, LLBLGen Pro, O/R Mapping, Advanced .NET, General Software Development, .NET, Linq, Linq to LLBLGen Pro
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