The Windows Workflow Activity Factory is a Microsoft Developer Blueprint.
It will read the XML from a user-supplied WSDL and generate a series of Windows Workflow custom activities which can be branded with custom graphics and backgrounds.
This article is the fourth in a series whose goal is to provide guidance to the WF developer on the selection of the root workflow type: sequential v state machine. This article describes a simplistic implementation of a Software Bug Reporting workflow that can be executed within the workflow simulator. Both Sequential Workflow and State Machine Workflow implementation of the Bug Reporting process will be demonstrated.
Four Microsoft white papers: An Introduction to Microsoft .NET Services for Developers – A Developer’s Guide to the Microsoft® .NET Access Control Service – A Developer’s Guide to the Microsoft® .NET Service Bus – A Developer’s Guide to the Microsoft® .NET Workflow Service.
jQuery selectors are one of the most important aspects of the jQuery library. These selectors use familiar CSS syntax to allow page authors to quickly and easily identify any set of page elements to operate upon with the jQuery library methods. Understanding jQuery selectors is the key to using the jQuery library most effectively. This reference card puts the power of jQuery selectors at your very fingertips
Web Development Helper is a free browser extension for Internet Explorer that provides a set of tools and utilities for the Web developer, esp. Ajax and ASP.NET developers. The tool provides features such as a DOM inspector, an HTTP tracing tool, and script diagnostics and immediate window.
The .NET Framework 3.5 Enhancements Training Kit includes presentations, hands-on labs, demos, and event materials. This content is designed to help you learn how to utilize the .NET 3.5 Enhancement features including: ASP.NET MVC, ASP.NET Dynamic Data, ASP.NET AJAX History, ASP.NET Routing, ADO.NET Data Services, ADO.NET Entity Framework, WCF 3.5 SP1, and the .NET Framework Client Profile.
This article is an attempt to articulate something of the nature of Oslo by relating it to the wider world of modelling, especially as envisaged by the OMG (Object Management Group).
You can tweak your 3.0/3.5 workflows to make the transition to Windows Workflow Foundation (WF) 4.0 a little easier. These guidelines limit the scenarios in which there's no corresponding feature in 4.0.
This book written by Granville Barnett and Luca Del Tongo is part of an effort to provide all developers with a core understanding of algorithms that operate on various common, and uncommon data structures. Data Structures and Algorithms: Annotated Reference with Examples is completely free!