Contents tagged with [Reference]
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[.NET C#] Unified C# 3.0 Specification
The C# team at csharp-online.net has a download link for a consolidated document presenting the Unified C# 3.0 Specification, which brings together all prior C# specs with the latest version. It weighs in at slightly over 500 pages, but looks to be the most comprehensive documentation yet available for C#, and is an essential reference for any .NET developer working at the deeper levels.
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[Tools] Unit Testing for JavaScript
The entire development community probably already knows about this, but I just discovered that an Open Source unit testing framework exists for JavaScript. The framework is JsUnit and it is a port from JUnit. If you find yourself doing extensive work with JavaScript, you may find JsUnit quite useful.
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[Laws] John Tobler's "Not About" Law
This law is very general but does have application to software development, as well:
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[Laws] New Rules!
Here are two new additions to John Tobler's Fun-duh-mental Laws and Rules:
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[Laws] John Tobler's Fun-duh-mental Laws and Rules
Now that I have three laws and a corollary under my belt, it's time to start my list:
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[Laws] John Tobler's "Three Strikes" Refactoring Rule
Another C# code review has just led me to state
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[Laws] John Tobler's Law of Tradeoffs
Until otherwise advised, I have laid claim to
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[Graphics] An awesome Blender 3D Tutorial Wikibook!
Blender 3D: Noob to Pro is a great, free tutorial for the free, open source Blender 3D graphics modeling and rendering software. I still cannot believe how little press and attention Blender 3D gets. To me, it's the coolest gift the open source community has yet made to those heroic independent graphic artists who strive to create great computer art without access to a huge corporate budget. Well, the GIMP was another such gift, but Blender 3D rocks! If this tutorial makes Blender 3D more accessible to CG artists who haven't tried it yet, that would be a huge win.
More Blender 3D Wikibooks! -
[Tools] PocketMod - Little White Notebooks for You and Me
I am happy to introduce PocketMod, "the free disposable personal organizer," one of the coolest little inventions I have seen in some time. For years I have folded up 8.5 * 11 inch paper in varoius ways to make myself little notepads I could carry around in my back pocket or shirt pocket. I am furious with myself that I wasn't smart enough to do what the creator of PocketMod did! No, I'm not going to spoil the fun; you have to go there to find out what this is all about.
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[Reference] Resume Dream Catchers
NOTE: This post is now an article and can be referenced here. This entry is maintained only to preserve the comment history.