I just (as in, 5 minutes ago) presented Reactive Programming with SyncLINQ at CodeCampOZ. Download the slides and samples SyncLINQ Subversion repository More information about SyncLINQ Custom TypeDescriptor example SearchQuery example Flapjax Thanks everyone who stuck around for the talk …
Blogs / Paul Stovell says…
Latest posts
-
Reactive Programming with SyncLINQ
http://www.paulstovell.com/blog/reactive-programming-with-synclinq -
LINQ to Microsoft Access
http://www.paulstovell.com/blog/linq-to-microsoft-accessI dare someone to build this In other news, I’m back from the MVP Summit and my first trip ever to the USA. It was a very inspiring trip, and I enjoyed finally meeting the product teams. I’m going to be head-down, bum-up this week preparing for my Code Camp OZ talk and finishing SyncLINQ 1.0. …
-
Summit Flights
http://www.paulstovell.com/blog/summit-flightsI’ll be on the following flights to Seattle next week for the MVP summit. If you happen to be on the same flight or just loitering around the airports, let me know Date Time From To Flight Sun, April 13 9:05 AM Adelaide Sydney DJ 403 Sun, April 13 2:40 PM Sydney San Francisco UA 870 Sun, …
431 blog reactions
-
MVP Summit 2008, Seattle Day 2
http://ozgrant.com/2008/04/16/mvp-summit-2008-seattle-day-2/fine” in the morning, rain/drizzle through the day and sometimes a little windy/cold in the evening. Overall, I think if you dress appropriately (read: layers) - then it’s not that big of a deal. As Mr. Stovell put it “I would rather the weather to be too cold, than 40+ heat for two weeks like Adelaide.” One of the nice things about the summit is that I’ve had a number of people (non-VSTS MVPs included) come up to me and say
-
MVP Summit 2008, Seattle Day 2
http://ozgrant.com/2008/04/16/mvp-summit-2008-seattle-day-2/fine” in the morning, rain/drizzle through the day and sometimes a little windy/cold in the evening. Overall, I think if you dress appropriately (read: layers) - then it’s not that big of a deal. As Mr. Stovell put it “I would rather the weather to be too cold, than 40+ heat for two weeks like Adelaide.” One of the nice things about the summit is that I’ve had a number of people (non-VSTS MVPs included) come up to me and say
-
MVP Summit 2008, Seattle Day 2
http://ozgrant.com/2008/04/16/mvp-summit-2008-seattle-day-2/fine” in the morning, rain/drizzle through the day and sometimes a little windy/cold in the evening. Overall, I think if you dress appropriately (read: layers) - then it’s not that big of a deal. As Mr. Stovell put it “I would rather the weather to be too cold, than 40+ heat for two weeks like Adelaide.” One of the nice things about the summit is that I’ve had a number of people (non-VSTS MVPs included) come up to me and say
-
Burela’s house-o-blog
http://davidburela.wordpress.comBlogroll Manga tower notgartner Paul Stovell Robitification
-
Paul Stovell says…
http://www.paulstovell.com/blogMy name is Paul Stovell, and I'm software developer based in Adelaide (Australia). I work for Readify, a .NET consulting company specialising in technical readiness. I am also a Microsoft MVP. I spend most of my spare time working on SyncL b7c INQ, an open source project that enables data binding over LINQ queries.
-
Hilton Giesenow's Jumbled Mind
http://dotnet.org.za/hiltonga post a little while ago about the various LINQ To projects I had seen, but Charlie Calvert has a much more complete list up here. It includes the following LINQ Providers: LINQ to Amazon LINQ to Active Directory LINQ to Bindable Sources (SyncLINQ) LINQ over C# project LINQ to CRM LINQ To Geo - Language Integrated Query for Geospatial Data LINQ to Excel LINQ to Expressions (MetaLinq) LINQ Extender (Toolkit for building LINQ Providers)
-
LINKBLOG for March 29, 2008
http://arjansworld.blogspot.com/2008/03/linkblog-for-march-2...Locking Rule #71 - Paul Stovell
-
Australian & New Zealand MVPs
http://www.techonq.com/blogs/anzmvp/default.aspxPosted Mar 29 2008, 11:56 AM by Aus/NZ MVPs
-
Locking Rule #71
http://www.paulstovell.com/blog/locking-rule-71In this scenario above, however, I only wrote code for one of the locks. As the author of that code, I don’t even know about the other class or that it takes locks. What can I do to avoid deadlocks? I learnt this the hard way with SyncLINQ. The code-base was littered with code like the above, until a couple of the unit tests I wrote to test threading started to fail just once every now and then. It took a while, but I eventually tracked it down to this pattern, and created my rule:
-
ADNUG Happens - Slides and Links
http://www.paulstovell.com/blog/adnug-happens-slides-and-lin...This afternoon I spoke about LINQ at the ADNUG Happens event. I covered: How we got to LINQ: IEnumerable, Anonymous Delegates, Generics New features that enable LINQ: Extension methods, generic parameter interference, lambda expressions, anonymous types What LINQ is
Top Tags
What this blog is about
- .net
- architecture
- c#
- coding
- eclipse
- industry
- misc
- soa
- web services
- windows presentation foundation
- adelaide
- alan le
- alt.net
- bjorn freeman-benson
- data binding
- expression blend
- extension methods
- hanselminutes
- linq
- multi-tier
- pawel pabich
- plinq
- readify
- scott hanselman
- sharepoint sucks
- software
- synclinq
- wcf
- wcf cargo cult
- wpf