Free Laptop Bag? LOL#
I just saw this posting from sandiego.craigslist.com and it really made me laugh. LOL.

http://sandiego.craigslist.org/csd/sys/1493519713.html



Heheh. Funny.
Thursday, December 03, 2009 11:51:10 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00) #    Comments [0]  | 

 

dasblog 2.3 released and my urge to make a new theme#

dasBlog/Release/ProjectReleases.aspx">dasBlog 2.3 was released last Monday March 16, 2009. It's a minor release that fixes a few bugs in the code base. Congrats dasBlog team for this release.

Below is the list of changes for this release:

New version of dotNetOpenId
Small bug fixes
Several small JavaScript errors
Captcha now works more reliably
Better Time handling in timeline
New 32/64 bit version of the Basic DatePicker
Centralized handling of binary files to a BinaryDataService

On a side note, I've been thinking for the past few months now about updating my site theme. I think I've been using this theme for the past 2 years and it's starting to look bland. I think this new release of dasBlog will give me the chance to upgrade my site theme. I don't know how  it's gonna look yet but i'm sure its going to be better than what it is today (Hopefully!). ;)

Wednesday, March 18, 2009 3:19:11 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00) #    Comments [0]  | 

 

ASP.NET MVC 1.0 RTMed#

I saw this on the ASP.NET MVC download page and it seems like it was released yesterday.

I haven't seen any official announcement anywhere yet but I expect to hear something coming out of the MIX09 event regarding ASP.NET MVC 1.0 RTM. I was able to confirm with Ben Scheirman via twitter that it's RTMed. I don't know where he got the news but judging by the screenshot above it looks like its true.

In case you are interested in learning about ASP.NET MVC, Microsoft has released an application called NerdDinner.com which is a event management website that enables users to register for "geek dinners". I believe that application was built using ASP.NET MVC 1.0 RC2 but it should be compatible with the RTM version (I haven't compiled it with the latest version yet). It's a really nice sample application that shows you how to build an application using ASP.NET MVC. Whats neat about NerdDinner.com is that it part of the book that Scott, Scott, Phil  & Rob are writing and they have been kind enough to let as peek at their upcoming book by giving a free chapter that details how they built the NerdDinner.com website step-by-step using ASP.NET MVC.

Wow, I'm really stoked! This is going to be a fun day! Thanks MS!

Wednesday, March 18, 2009 2:33:48 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00) #    Comments [0]  | 

 

How To: Creating Tooltips in Silverlight 2#

Tooltips are great additions to any interface and in this article I'm going to show you how to attach a tooltip to control in Silverlight 2.

To start, let's assume that we have a button that we want to add a tooltip to:

[XAML]

<UserControl x:Class="KeithRull.Silverlight.CreatingTooltips.Page"
    xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml/presentation" 
    xmlns:x="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml" 
    Width="400" Height="300">
    <Grid x:Name="LayoutRoot" Background="#FF1E238E">
        <Button Content="Hover over me!" 
                Height="20" 
                Width="100" Margin="30 40" 
                VerticalAlignment="Top" 
                HorizontalAlignment="Left">
                
        </Button>
    </Grid>
</UserControl>

[Rendered UI]

In order or us to attach a tooltip to our button we need to create a reference to the TooltipService.Tooltip inside the our button's XAML declaration. We also need to setup the Tooltip.Content to tell the compiler what to show when the user hover's to our button.

[XAML]

<UserControl x:Class="KeithRull.Silverlight.CreatingTooltips.Page"
    xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml/presentation" 
    xmlns:x="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml" 
    Width="400" Height="300">
    <Grid x:Name="LayoutRoot" Background="#FF1E238E">
        <Button Content="Hover over me!" 
                Height="20" 
                Width="100" Margin="30 40" 
                VerticalAlignment="Top" 
                HorizontalAlignment="Left">
            <ToolTipService.ToolTip>
                <ToolTip>
                    <ToolTip.Content>
                        <TextBlock TextWrapping="Wrap">
                            Hooray! I'm alive!.
                        </TextBlock>
                    </ToolTip.Content>
                </ToolTip>
            </ToolTipService.ToolTip>
        </Button>
    </Grid>
</UserControl>

[Rendered UI (at runtime)]

The message "Hooray! I'm alive!" appeared when the user hovers over our button. We can also cutomize how our tooltip appears by adding more XAML elements in the Tooltip.Content property.

[XAML]

<UserControl x:Class="KeithRull.Silverlight.CreatingTooltips.Page"
    xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml/presentation" 
    xmlns:x="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml" 
    Width="400" Height="300">
    <Grid x:Name="LayoutRoot" Background="#FF1E238E">
        <Button Content="Hover over me!" 
                Height="20" 
                Width="100" Margin="30 40" 
                VerticalAlignment="Top" 
                HorizontalAlignment="Left">
            <ToolTipService.ToolTip>
                <ToolTip Background="#FFFFFF" Width="150">
                    <ToolTip.Content>
                        <StackPanel>
                            <Image Source="images/silverlight.png" />
                            <TextBlock HorizontalAlignment="Right">
                                It rocks like a champ!
                            </TextBlock>
                        </StackPanel>    
                    </ToolTip.Content>
                </ToolTip>
            </ToolTipService.ToolTip>
        </Button>
    </Grid>
</UserControl>

[Rendered UI (at runtime)]

Another customization that you might want to do is specifying the HorizontalOffset and the VerticalOffset. This allows you to specify where the tooltip will appear in reference to your target control.

Monday, March 09, 2009 10:49:38 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00) #    Comments [0]  | 

 

ASP.NET MVC RC 2 Source code and Futures are now available on CodePlex#

I just saw this twitter...

Sweeeeet!

Time to start polishing my ASP.NET MVC skills. I've played with ASP.NET MVC before but never had the chance to use it other than building small samples. I might be rusty but I know I'll have a great companion book in learning ASP.NET MVC 1.0 once Rob, Scott, Scott and Phil's upcoming book comes out.

Wednesday, March 04, 2009 1:00:26 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00) #    Comments [0]  | 

 

How To: Blocking\Restricting certain file types from being saved to a directory using FileSystemWatcher#

A user a devpinoy.org posted a question on the forum section asking if there's a way to restrict files from being saved in a directory. I know you can do this via the FileSystemWatcher class so I quickly whipped my Visual Studio 2008 IDE and started building a prototype application to demonstrate the solution.

The first thing that you need to do is to set-up some key details on what we want to watch/monitor

private const string ALLOWED_FILE_EXTENSION = ".doc";
private const string DEFAULT_WATCH_FOLDER = @"E:\Test Folder\";

Next, the FileSystemWatcher specify what directory you want to monitor.

FileSystemWatcher watcher = new FileSystemWatcher(DEFAULT_WATCH_FOLDER);

After that you need to setup the notification filters on what type of filesystem changes you want to watch;

watcher.NotifyFilter = NotifyFilters.LastAccess |
                                    NotifyFilters.LastWrite |
                                    NotifyFilters.FileName |
                                    NotifyFilters.DirectoryName |
                                    NotifyFilters.CreationTime;

And finally, we need to set-up the FileSystem events you want our FileSystem. In this case, we only want to monitor Created and Renamed events.

watcher.Created += new FileSystemEventHandler(watcher_Created);
watcher.Renamed += new RenamedEventHandler(watcher_Renamed);

Now, let's start coding our event handlers.

For our event handler, I decided to use one method that would handle both the Created and Rename event. Ideally you want to seperate this to into two different methods because you might want to handle the tow events differently but since all I want to do is to block files\folders that doesn't match my criteria i decided to handle them both using a single method called FileSystemHandler.

void watcher_Renamed(object sender, RenamedEventArgs e)
{
    FileSystemHandler(e.Name, e.FullPath);
}

void watcher_Created(object sender, FileSystemEventArgs e)
{
    FileSystemHandler(e.Name, e.FullPath);    
}

Below is the implementation detail for our FileSystemHandler method.

void FileSystemHandler(string name, string fullpath)
{
    try
    {
        //read the contents of our directory
        DirectoryInfo di = new DirectoryInfo(DEFAULT_WATCH_FOLDER);
        //get the filesysteminfo[] objects
        FileSystemInfo[] fileSystemInfoArray = di.GetFileSystemInfos();

        //there's always going to be one object matching this criteria all the time
        FileSystemInfo found = fileSystemInfoArray.Single(f => f.FullName.Equals(fullpath));

        //if it finds something
        if (found != null)
        {
            //cast the found object to directoryinfo
            DirectoryInfo d = found as DirectoryInfo;

            //if it's null it means it's a FileInfo object
            if (d == null)
            {
                //cast found to a fileinfo object
                FileInfo f = found as FileInfo;

                //delete the file if the extension doesn't match our desired/allowed extension
                if (!f.Extension.Equals(ALLOWED_FILE_EXTENSION))
                {
                    f.Delete();
                }
            }
            else
            {
                //directories are not allowed on this folder too!
                d.Delete(true);
            }
        }
    }
    catch
    {
        //let it sleep for 30 seconds
        Thread.Sleep(30000);

        //it failed so we need to try again recussively
        /*
            note: it's a good idea to set a retry limit here because if we don't 
            then the app will retry to infinity but i'll leave that up to you.
         */
        FileSystemHandler(name, fullpath);
    }
}

What the function above is doing is that it checks to see if the filesystem object that was created on the directory is either a file or a directory. If it is a directory, automatically delete it since we dont want any directory to be saved on our folder. If it is a file we need to check if it's extension matches the allowed file extension. If it matches the allowed extension we let it thru. If it doesn't we call the the Delete method on the FileInfo object to delete the file.

All we need to do now is to tell the watcher to start monitor our folder

watcher.EnableRaisingEvents = true;

Setting EnableRaisingEvents to true triggers our watcher to start monitoring the folder. Setting it to false will stop the watcher.

And we are done! Now we have an application that blocks saving or renaming of files in a folder that doesn't match the allowed file extension.

Below is the full listing of the code for the demo project I built for this article:

using System;
using System.Linq;
using System.Windows.Forms;
using System.IO;
using System.Threading;

namespace KeithRull.FolderSpy
{
    public partial class MainForm : Form
    {
        private bool IsCurrentlyWatching = false;
        private const string ALLOWED_FILE_EXTENSION = ".doc";
        private const string DEFAULT_WATCH_FOLDER = @"E:\Test Folder\";
        FileSystemWatcher watcher;

        public MainForm()
        {
            InitializeComponent();
        }

        private void MainForm_Load(object sender, EventArgs e)
        {
            SetUpWatcher();
        }

        private void watchButton_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
        {
            if (!IsCurrentlyWatching)
            {
                watchButton.Text = "Stop watching";
                IsCurrentlyWatching = true;

                //start the watcher
                watcher.EnableRaisingEvents = true;
            }
            else
            {
                watchButton.Text = "Start watching";
                IsCurrentlyWatching = false;

                //stop the watcher
                watcher.EnableRaisingEvents = false;
            }
        }

        void watcher_Renamed(object sender, RenamedEventArgs e)
        {
            FileSystemHandler(e.Name, e.FullPath);
        }

        void watcher_Created(object sender, FileSystemEventArgs e)
        {
            FileSystemHandler(e.Name, e.FullPath);    
        }

        void FileSystemHandler(string name, string fullpath)
        {
            try
            {
                //read the contents of our directory
                DirectoryInfo di = new DirectoryInfo(DEFAULT_WATCH_FOLDER);
                //get the filesysteminfo[] objects
                FileSystemInfo[] fileSystemInfoArray = di.GetFileSystemInfos();

                //there's always going to be one object matching this criteria all the time
                FileSystemInfo found = fileSystemInfoArray.Single(f => f.FullName.Equals(fullpath));

                //if it finds something
                if (found != null)
                {
                    //cast the found object to directoryinfo
                    DirectoryInfo d = found as DirectoryInfo;

                    //if it's null it means it's a FileInfo object
                    if (d == null)
                    {
                        //cast found to a fileinfo object
                        FileInfo f = found as FileInfo;

                        //delete the file if the extension doesn't match our desired/allowed extension
                        if (!f.Extension.Equals(ALLOWED_FILE_EXTENSION))
                        {
                            f.Delete();
                        }
                    }
                    else
                    {
                        //directories are not allowed on this folder too!
                        d.Delete(true);
                    }
                }
            }
            catch
            {
                //let it sleep for 30 seconds
                Thread.Sleep(30000);

                //it failed so we need to try again recussively
                /*
                    note: it's a good idea to set a retry limit here because if we don't 
                    then the app will retry to infinity but i'll leave that up to you.
                 */
                FileSystemHandler(name, fullpath);
            }
        }

        void SetUpWatcher()
        {
            watcher = new FileSystemWatcher(DEFAULT_WATCH_FOLDER);
            watcher.NotifyFilter = NotifyFilters.LastAccess |
                                    NotifyFilters.LastWrite |
                                    NotifyFilters.FileName |
                                    NotifyFilters.DirectoryName |
                                    NotifyFilters.CreationTime;
            watcher.Created += new FileSystemEventHandler(watcher_Created);
            watcher.Renamed += new RenamedEventHandler(watcher_Renamed);

        }
    }
}

As always, you can download the code for the complete project here: KeithRull.FolderSpy.zip (40.38 KB)

Wednesday, February 25, 2009 7:48:40 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00) #    Comments [0]  | 

 

With great joy we introduce...#

Tuesday, February 24, 2009 5:44:09 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00) #    Comments [3]  | 

 

My MIX09 10K Contest Entry: Silverlight Pregnancy Calendar#

I had some free time during the holidays and saw at the MIX09 website that they have a contest entitled MIX09 10K Challenge where they ask participant to create a web application that is either using Microsoft® Silverlight™ or Windows Presentation Foundation, as a XAML Browser Application running in Partial Trust or as a ClickOnce application in 10 kilobytes or less. I decided to take a stab at it and this is what I've comed up with

SilverCalendar: A Silverlight Pregancy Calendar

You can see the app live here http://2009.visitmix.com/MIXtify/TenKDisplay.aspx?SubmissionID=0051

Dont forget to vote when you're there :P LOL

My primary motivation when I built the app is the idea of having something that is going to be useful and at the same time fun to build. My wife is currently 34 weeks pregnant and it made me think that a pregnancy calendar would be q great application to do since it relates to me and my current day to day life. I love pregnancy calendars because it gives you a good daily insight on the progress of your baby and what you might expected as you go along in your daily life as a soon to be parent. 

The application that i built is using Microsoft Silverlight 2 with a backend WCF web service. You can find the pregnancy calendar web service here. I wasn't able to add any animations to the application because I decided to concentrate in adding functionality to app rather than the eye candy' With that said, I'll be posting the non-10K application this week.

Be sure to comeback on this blog in the coming weeks because I'll be publishing the source code to both project soon together with a 11 part tutorial and screencast walkthrough that i have prepared to show how to to build an application using .NET 3.5, WCF, WPF and Silverlight.

Thursday, January 08, 2009 7:47:35 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00) #    Comments [0]  | 

 

A Thanksgiving Announcement#

I've been keeping this for months now because I wanted to announce it at this years Thanksgiving... :) 

On June 7, 2008 we learned about this wonderful news:

Yup, I'm going to be a father soon! :) My wife and I are very excited about this blessing to our family. We can't wait to see our baby on February 2009.

Below is the first picture of our baby taken at 6 weeks:

Next is our babys picture at 20 weeks:

I don't have her new picture scanned yet but I'll post it a soon as I have them.4 weeks ago we learned that we are having a baby girl. Sweet! 

As with all first time dads, there's a lot of things to learn. I'm learning a bunch of new stuff everyday and I highly recommend going BabyCenter.com. BabyCenter.com is a site dedicated to babies and parenting in general. They have a ton on articles about babies, pregnancy and parenting which i really love. I go there everyday to check out articles and information that will help me become a great dad. Also, JustMommies.com is a great site too. They have this calendar thingy where you can check out the progress of your baby day-by-day which is pretty cool!

This is what me and my wife are thankful for this Thanksgiving!

Happy Thanksgiving everyone! God Bless!

Family | Life | My Faith
Wednesday, November 26, 2008 11:44:21 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00) #    Comments [4]  | 

 

I am a big fan of Tim Tebow..#

and now I respect him even more...

http://sports.espn.go.com/broadband/video/video?id=3569702

I just wish more and more athletes can be like this guy. A lot of the athletes nowadays are either drunkards, gamblers or womanizers which is pretty sad considering that a lot of kids in this generation look up to sport professionals as their role model. 

Tim Tebow is different. He keeps himself grounded and models the message of his faith to people around him which makes him a step above and beyond among his peers.

Thanks and God Bless Tim for being a model to this generation!

Tuesday, November 18, 2008 11:49:38 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00) #    Comments [1]  | 

 

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