This is the Part 3 of a 3 part series on using sub-projects with the Web Application Projects add-in for Visual Studio 2005.
Part 1 of the series can be found here.
Part 2 of the series can be found here.
This post covers the final concept I wanted to share when using sub-projects with the Web Application Projects add-in, that is ...
Once you download ASP.NET AJAX, you are ready to start using Visual Web Developer and Visual Studio 2005 for your development.
The first thing you will notice when you open up Visual Web Developer is that you now have a new project type called ASP.NET AJAX Enabled Web Site as seen below.
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Selecting this option will give you a web ...
Many of you are probably aware of Visual Web Developer/Visual Studio web site starter kits that are available online. If you have not seen or used these yet, they are complete end-to-end working web site templates that you can either use a starting point for your project or as a learning aid to get more familiar with&...
This week marks the first anniversary of Visual Studio 2005 and the Express editions. Almost a year ago to the day - 11/7/2005 to be precise - was the day we launched Visual Studio 2005. That also marked the debut of the free Express Editions that have since proven to be a huge hit in the developer community. ...
This Monday we shipped Beta2 of the ASP.NET AJAX framework – formerly known as “Atlas”. You can visit the ASP.NET AJAX website or Scott Guthrie’s blog article for details. The bits can be downloaded from here.
We have made sure that the already shipped version of Visual Studio 2005 and Visual Web Developer...
Hey Web Developers -- My name is Bradley Millington and I am a Program Manager on the WebTools team. Lately I've been looking at opportunities for future versions of Visual Studio to better integrate with Windows Vista and IIS 7.0. In the meantime, however, you can use Visual Studio 2005 to start developing on...