Home / ASP.NET Weblogs

Browse by Tags

Related Posts

  • Global Application settings and the web.config file.

    While getting started on . NETOOP , one of the first issues to address is that of “Global” settings. When you build a web application for a single purpose, you can hard-code things without much concern. Microsoft.com is probably always going to have the same name, but .NETOOP is going to be a portal...
    Posted to What's New (Weblog) by Anonymous on 07-06-2009, 12:00 AM
    Filed under: ASP.NET, performance, Microsoft, .NETOOP, ASP.NETOOP, Application Settings
  • Proving the performance of Static Properties.

    I don’t claim to be the best developer on the planet :) but I’m always amazed at how all the “experts” come out of the woodwork to posh on other peoples code :) Several folks have commented and emailed about hey the technique I posted earlier was unnecessary. But only ONE guy (thanks Henrik Juhlin )...
    Posted to What's New (Weblog) by Anonymous on 07-08-2009, 12:00 AM
    Filed under: ASP.NET, performance, Microsoft
  • .NETOOP Global Statics Update

    With lots of great feedback I’ve modified the “SiteGlobalSettings” class I wrote about earlier. Though it still uses global static but the values are stored in a Global Resource File. This affords us the superior performance of the mechanism, keeps the “editable” nature of the data, and keeps the simple...
    Posted to What's New (Weblog) by Anonymous on 07-13-2009, 12:00 AM
    Filed under: performance, Microsoft, blog, ASP.NETOOP
  • Improve ASPX web page performance by combining Skin & CSS

    There has been numerous discussions happened on web site performance, ranging from UI design to Site H osting. Out of this, one of the important step is, to reduce the size of Http Response size. Optimizing Http Response will considerably reduce the page loading time at the browser. There are many ways...
    Posted to Runtime Debugger - kannan M ambadi's blog (Weblog) by kannan.ambadi on 06-22-2009, 12:00 AM
    Filed under: Asp.Net, Response, C# 2.0, .NET, microsoft, visual studio, Themes, StyleSheet, Asp.Net 2.0, CSS, HTML, .NET 3.5, .NET 2.0, ASP.NET 3.5, .Net Development, .NET Framework, Visual Studio 2008, Web 2.0, Web Development, Tools, Performance, Code Perfromance, Skins, Web, Tips, General Software Development, Tips and Tricks, ASPX Page Performance, Software Development
  • Nullable types and ?? operator

    This time, i would like to discuss about a cool feature of C# 2.0. As you know, some database operations return null values and results into throwing exceptions unless you handled well in your business logic. .Net 2.0 has been solved by introducing nullable types. Lets discuss about its features and...
    Posted to Runtime Debugger - kannan M ambadi's blog (Weblog) by kannan.ambadi on 06-06-2008, 12:00 AM
    Filed under: Asp.Net, C#, C# 2.0, Nullable types, .NET, microsoft, visual studio, Asp.Net 2.0, .NET 3.5, .NET 2.0, ASP.NET 3.5, .Net Development, .NET Framework, Visual Studio 2008, Web 2.0, Web Development, ORM Architecture, Tools, Architecture, Performance, Code Perfromance, Web, Tips, General Software Development, Tips and Tricks, Software Development, 3-Tier Architecture, C# Properties
  • Exporting Dataset as CSV

    Hi Everyone, Below given an easy way to export data from a dataset as CSV(comma seperated values) . At first, it converts the datatable to html table format and then writes data as output stream. We need to set the Content-Type of Response object as Excel format and add the filename to be streamed on...
    Posted to Runtime Debugger - kannan M ambadi's blog (Weblog) by kannan.ambadi on 03-25-2008, 12:00 AM
    Filed under: Asp.Net, csv, Response, Dataset, GridView, C# 2.0, .NET, microsoft, visual studio, Asp.Net 2.0, .NET 2.0, .Net Development, .NET Framework, Web 2.0, Web Development, Tools, Performance, Code Perfromance, Web, Tips, General Software Development, Tips and Tricks, ASPX Page Performance, Software Development, Visual Studio 2005
  • Simple way to check your code performance

    Hi guys, Of course, we all know foreach loop takes more time than for loop and there are lot of similar scenarios in .Net. Even if it takes lot of time, we'll be forced to use foreach loop at some cases. So it'll be better, if we come to know the time taken for executing a piece of code at the runtime...
    Posted to Runtime Debugger - kannan M ambadi's blog (Weblog) by kannan.ambadi on 03-25-2008, 12:00 AM
    Filed under: debug, Asp.Net, csv, Response, C# 2.0, .NET, microsoft, visual studio, Asp.Net 2.0, .NET 2.0, .Net Development, .NET Framework, Web 2.0, Web Development, Tools, Performance, Code Perfromance, Web, Tips, General Software Development, Tips and Tricks, ASPX Page Performance, Software Development, Visual Studio 2005, Debugging
  • PHP versus ASP.NET – Windows versus Linux – Who’s the fastest ?

    NOTE: This is “Misfit Data” - While I do work for Microsoft, this data is NOT “official Microsoft” data and is not endorsed or ratified by Microsoft in any way. I built and ran these tests because I was personally curious about comparative performance. If these test results cause you dizziness, vomiting...
    Posted to What's New (Weblog) by Anonymous on 08-05-2009, 12:00 AM
    Filed under: ASP.NET, performance, PHP, Microsoft, SQL Server, ASP.NETOOP, Linux, Postgress, MySQL
Page 1 of 1 (8 items)