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3 Articles match "Products","SOS"
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NET Programming for Performance
Write code that works well with the garbage collector Properly handle and throw exceptions Automate transactions with System.Transaction Implement IDisposable to build reliable.NET applications Scale your application to multicore machines using threads Improve memory usage through proper understanding of assemblies, types, and JIT compilation Debug difficult problems using WinDBG, SOS, and ADPLUS Effective.NET provides experienced.NET developers with practical knowledge and techniques for building robust, scalable, and highly available.NET applications.
DevelopMentor Courses
- Friday, June 12, 2009
Essential SQL Server for Developers
Acquire skills you need to be productive today. Some topics covered are: Memory handling Threading behaviour SOS? Learn to write code for maximum database performance, re-usability, and application modularity. Discover how and when to use.NET support built into SQL Server 2005. Find out about new programming techniques enabled by SQL Server 2005 and Visual Studio 2005. You'll get answers to these questions: How can I improve and evaluate the performance of my queries? How can I take advantage of query plans to optimize database performance? What's the best way to secure my data?
DevelopMentor Courses
- Friday, June 12, 2009
Guerrilla.NET
idioms like iterator methods, the lambda operator, and extension methods Write code that works well with the garbage collector Handle and throw exceptions properly Work with Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF) and XAML Write browser applications using Silverlight Manage long-running processes with Windows Workflow Foundation (WF) Threading and Concurrency Scale your application to multicore machines using threads Debug difficult problems using WinDBG, SOS, and ADPLUS Understand how the.NET class libraries and the C# language are evolving in.NET 3.5 Use C# 3.0 and C# 4.0? and Dublin.
DevelopMentor Courses
- Friday, June 12, 2009
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2 Articles match "Products","SOS"
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SOS: finding the method bound to an EventHandler with WinDbg.
This, of course, is bad form because the System.Web.UI.Page object is intended to be a transient object - it goes away at the end of the request - in production code, I would really bind the event to a handler in global.asax instead. load sos 0:000> !DumpHeap Note: it appears that GCRoot doesn't work well inside VS.NET 2005 - apparently the SOS debugging extension is using some debugger API which isn't fully supported in VS.NET, so you need to familiarize yourself with WinDBG to do this. />. love SOS and WinDBG. But as I said, this was a sample. Address MT Size.
Mark's Blog of Random Thoughts
- Friday, September 1, 2006
SOS: finding the method bound to an EventHandler with WinDbg.
This, of course, is bad form because the System.Web.UI.Page object is intended to be a transient object - it goes away at the end of the request - in production code, I would really bind the event to a handler in global.asax instead. load sos 0:000> !DumpHeap Note: it appears that GCRoot doesn't work well inside VS.NET 2005 - apparently the SOS debugging extension is using some debugger API which isn't fully supported in VS.NET, so you need to familiarize yourself with WinDBG to do this. />. love SOS and WinDBG. But as I said, this was a sample. Address MT Size.
Mark's Blog of Random Thoughts
- Friday, September 1, 2006
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SOS: finding the method bound to an EventHandler with WinDbg.
This, of course, is bad form because the System.Web.UI.Page object is intended to be a transient object - it goes away at the end of the request - in production code, I would really bind the event to a handler in global.asax instead. load sos 0:000> !DumpHeap Note: it appears that GCRoot doesn't work well inside VS.NET 2005 - apparently the SOS debugging extension is using some debugger API which isn't fully supported in VS.NET, so you need to familiarize yourself with WinDBG to do this. />. love SOS and WinDBG. But as I said, this was a sample. Address MT Size.
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SOS: finding the method bound to an EventHandler with WinDbg.
This, of course, is bad form because the System.Web.UI.Page object is intended to be a transient object - it goes away at the end of the request - in production code, I would really bind the event to a handler in global.asax instead. load sos 0:000> !DumpHeap Note: it appears that GCRoot doesn't work well inside VS.NET 2005 - apparently the SOS debugging extension is using some debugger API which isn't fully supported in VS.NET, so you need to familiarize yourself with WinDBG to do this. />. love SOS and WinDBG. But as I said, this was a sample. Address MT Size.
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