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plz i need help how i can extract data from xml document and put it in database using asp.net
hi
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Try asking in one of the forums...
- Anders
Money talks, but all mine ever says is "Goodbye!"
My Photos[^]
nsms@spyf.dk <- Spam Collecting
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Not sure about the too "professional" part but I to am a Code Monkey. Also, Thanks alot for such an awesome website. CodeProject is the best.
Bobby Cannon
www.sharpdeck.net
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Put a million monkeys in a room, each at a computer. Eventually, they'll produce an operating system.
Wait a second, this sounds like Linux...
Software Zen: delete this;
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Gary R. Wheeler wrote:
Put a million monkeys in a room, each at a computer. Eventually, they'll produce an operating system.
Wait a second, this sounds like Linux...
Put a million donkeys in a room, each at a computer. Eventually, they'll produce an operating system.
Wait a second, this sounds like Windows...
-- Sebastián
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sbenitezb wrote:
Put a million donkeys in a room, each at a computer. Eventually, they'll produce an operating system.
Put a million marketing people in a room, each at a computer. Eventually they'll produce an operating system. *THAT* sounds a lot like Windows.
No single raindrop believes that it is responsible for the flood.
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Put a million Linux users in a room, each at a computer, and they'll each produce an operating system, all completely different from eachother that aren't compatible.
hmm... :P
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Hi,
I make software for both myself and others and I get paid for it occasionlly.. But mostly it's for self-educaditionally purposes.
//- UP THE IRONS, MORTEN S. KRISTENSEN -\\
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Hello,my friends,happy new year to you. For me, programming language is only to meet the need of my research interest, and this is indeed the case currently. Now I am majored in Computed Tomography Reconstruction, and maybe oneday I will make some little software for fun.
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how Cool is that!
I ones wrote a lib that are now running in India in a planetary
it was a button lib for Qbasic or qb.exe The old days
If I ever visit India I wil go to that planetary, the bad thing is that I have not a clue were it is in India I lost the adress
Who remembers the good old days when 64k was just 64k and nothing more or less
He believed the commercials that said drink beer, get laid
but at closin' time he was alone, he didn't get paid.
Last night his lover was a razorblade..
"Dan Reed song Mix it up"
What do you want to patch today?
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I write because if I don't my boss/Pimp will whip me.
"if you vote me down, I shall become more powerful than you can possibly imagine" - Michael P. Butler.
Support Bone
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Whip me, beat me, make me write self-modifying code...
Software Zen: delete this;
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MacTruck wrote:
Intel x86 assembler
Actually, I've written a lot of the stuff. The bottom portion of a mixed mode (real/protected) user interface package was written in assembler for speed. This was back in the bad old days of MS-DOS and DOS extenders, which let a DOS program switch to protected mode and use >1Mb of memory. I don't remember any of it being self-modifying, although I've seen plenty of that sort of thing. I did use opcodes that weren't supported by the assembler at the time, using the DB-in-a-macro trick.
At that, I'm still maintaining an OS/2 device driver that is 18,000+ lines of assembly language.
As you've guessed, I've learned to like to whip .
Software Zen: delete this;
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Well, the software package i spend most of my time on is used both internally, and by external customers. Still, its primary purpose is as an internal tool, and is developed with that focus, so i'll stick with that as my answer.
However, it would be interesting in the future to have a multiple choice version of this poll (w/ out the "mainly" bit).
Zno one puts flowers on a flower's grave
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I would hope that *any* shop who writes software that they could potentially use themsevles will be using their own software internally.
No single raindrop believes that it is responsible for the flood.
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The listed categories all treat software as an independent product, where the software itself is the product. This ignores the case where software is an integral part of a product that includes hardware and software. These products include any computer-controlled device, from cell phones to cars to medical equipment to aircraft carriers.
My team develops control software for large scale ink jet printing systems. The categories that apply to us are "I'm a value-added reseller" and "I write in-house software", but neither of these capture the flavor of our 'capacity', and are in fact misleading. Our capacity is 'in-house', in that we develop applications that are used in manufacturing and field service in addition to the software that runs the company's products. Our capacity is also 'value-added', since without the software to run them and supply data, these printing systems are simply large expensive hunks of steel that spray ink.
There is more to the world of software than web applications and data bases.
Software Zen: delete this;
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Gary R. Wheeler wrote:
My team develops control software for large scale ink jet printing systems.
That sounds cool. Like how large?
*¨¨`)
¸¸.·´ ¸.·*¨¨`)
(¸¸.·* ¸ .·*
¸¸.·*
(¸¸.~~> Joel Holdsworth.
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You can find our products here[^], but the gist of it is we build some of the fastest ink jet printers in the world. We can print fully variable data (text and graphics) at 300x300 dpi on 17 inch wide paper at up to 1000 feet per minute. That's 16.7 feet per second. Our stuff is used for printing large volume jobs, like catalog labelling, lottery tickets, business statements, and that sort of thing. Unfortunately, this kind of speed comes at a price; it's not uncommon for one of these systems to run over $1.5 million.
Software Zen: delete this;
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Gary R. Wheeler wrote:
one of these systems to run over $1.5 million.
Ooops. Scratches off Xmas list.
Chris Meech
It's much easier to get rich telling people what they want to hear. Christopher Duncan
I can't help getting older, but I refuse to grow up. Roger Wright
I've been meaning to change my sig. Thanks! Alvaro Mendez
We're more like a hobbiest in a Home Depot drooling at all the shiny power tools, rather than a craftsman that makes the chair to an exacting level of comfort by measuring the customer's butt. Marc Clifton
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I write software not only for fun but also for making useful tools. Those tools give facilities for my job and spare time.
I am seeking...
For what?
Why did you ask me for what? I don't know!
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I agree - that's mainly the only reason I program anymore.
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