| |
browse.develop.com
Browse.develop.com is a community that was established to collect and
organize valuable web information. Our technical staff have selected and
indexed information and courses that they feel will help you stay
current on best practices across the SDLC.
|
13 Articles match "How To","Service Orientation"
| Related DevelopMentor Courses | MORE | | Service-Orientation Today and Tomorrow Training In Deutsch , klicken Sie hier Based on the ranges of topics below, you will be able to take the first steps in the world of Service-Orientation and Cloud Computing with confidence and above all be prepared for future projects: Service-Orientation Cloud and Cloud Computing Identity Management and Claims-Based Identity Windows Communication Foundation (WCF) Windows Workflow Foundation (WF) Azure Services Platform (with Windows Azure and.NET Services) In Deutsch , klicken Sie hier Are you tired of constantly reading about "crisis" and "restrictions"? DevelopMentor Courses - Tuesday, March 1, 2011 Guerrilla.NET (UK) Training Understand the new features of the core.NET runtime services including the garbage collector. Create declarative services using workflow that can be deployed as simple text files Decouple your entity model from the data using Plain Old CLR Objects (POCOs). Create robust code using unit testing frameworks and mocking Simplify your service deployment with zero config services with WCF 4.0. Write modern web applications that are simpler to unit test with ASP.NET MVC. Create REST based services based on the WCF and ASP.NET stacks. couldn't? Register now. DevelopMentor Courses - Tuesday, March 1, 2011 Essential Windows Communication Foundation 4 Training Because it incorporates web service standards, WCF enables interoperability with other platforms such as Java/Unix. Discover the fundamental tasks of designing and building services & contracts, master error handling, serialization, instance and concurrency management and bend hosting, security, identity management, and reliability to suit your needs. You'll get answers to these questions: How do I design services using contracts? How can I model services in a pure Web style? What's the best way to host and expose services? DevelopMentor Courses - Tuesday, March 1, 2011 |
3 Articles match "How To","Service Orientation"
| The Latest from DevelopMentor | MORE | | Trackable DTO’s: Taking N-Tier a Step Further with EF4 Not long ago my friend and colleague Richard Blewett wrote a blog post on Self-Tracking Entities in EF4, in which he questioned the service-orientation of Self-Tracking Entities in EF4. While STE’s are placed in an assembly that does not reference the Entity Framework, the way in which change state is preserved in an STE is overly complex because it tries make it easier for EF to transmit those changes to the ObjectStateManager on the service side. Fast forward to Entity Framework 4.0 Download code for this post here. and Visual Studio 2010. NET client. Tony and Zuzana's World - Friday, February 19, 2010 EF 4.0 N-Tier Support: Take 2 which includes enhancements to self-tracking entities. As the name implies, self-tracking entities know how to track their own state , so that it can be transmitted across service boundaries in an n-tier application. The idea is similar to what we’ve been able to do for several years with datasets. Datasets know how to keep track of their change-state and the table adapter knows how to inspect a dataset to generate insert, update and delete statements. template to the NorthwindModel project. Tony and Zuzana's World - Thursday, November 12, 2009 The final sustainable edge At the risk of boring my readers with a third entry on the subject of this book I think it deserves a wrap up - and a slight correction to some of my initial comments. The books central argument is that sustainable competitive advantage (to use a loaded term) is only achievable by companies that can adapt and change to take advantage of changing markets and environment. Problem is, it is incredibly difficult to do, far easier to find something that gives you and advantage now and try to guard that. So how to the two Johns propose we do this? Allan Kelly's Blog - Sunday, September 4, 2005 | -
| The Best from DevelopMentor | MORE | - Trackable DTO’s: Taking N-Tier a Step Further with EF4
Not long ago my friend and colleague Richard Blewett wrote a blog post on Self-Tracking Entities in EF4, in which he questioned the service-orientation of Self-Tracking Entities in EF4. While STE’s are placed in an assembly that does not reference the Entity Framework, the way in which change state is preserved in an STE is overly complex because it tries make it easier for EF to transmit those changes to the ObjectStateManager on the service side. Fast forward to Entity Framework 4.0 Download code for this post here. and Visual Studio 2010. NET client. Tony and Zuzana's World - Friday, February 19, 2010 - EF 4.0 N-Tier Support: Take 2
which includes enhancements to self-tracking entities. As the name implies, self-tracking entities know how to track their own state , so that it can be transmitted across service boundaries in an n-tier application. The idea is similar to what we’ve been able to do for several years with datasets. Datasets know how to keep track of their change-state and the table adapter knows how to inspect a dataset to generate insert, update and delete statements. template to the NorthwindModel project. Tony and Zuzana's World - Thursday, November 12, 2009 - The final sustainable edge
At the risk of boring my readers with a third entry on the subject of this book I think it deserves a wrap up - and a slight correction to some of my initial comments. The books central argument is that sustainable competitive advantage (to use a loaded term) is only achievable by companies that can adapt and change to take advantage of changing markets and environment. Problem is, it is incredibly difficult to do, far easier to find something that gives you and advantage now and try to guard that. So how to the two Johns propose we do this? Allan Kelly's Blog - Sunday, September 4, 2005 %>
| | |