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Mark Ursino

Extended Email Action Sitecore Module - 0 views

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    The Mail workflow action extends the standard Sitecore email action which is included with the default installation. It is distributed as a standard Sitecore package. The package includes the actual template for this action (the Extended email action), which inherits from the Sitecore Standard template. The extended email action template contains the following fields, grouped in the Parameters section: To - the recipient's email address; From - the sender's email address; Subject - the subject of the email (allows using Velocity templates); Message - the body of the email (allows using Velocity templates); Mail server - the email server you'd like to use for sending emails; *Type - (the same as the Type field of the Sitecore Action template).
Mark Ursino

Standard Type Casting and "as" Operator Conversions - 0 views

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    Converting objects from one type to another is a common practice in software development. When dealing with this, it is important to understand the difference between standard casting and using the "as" operator to convert. In this article, Brendan explains this difference and when to use each type of conversion. His code snippets demonstrate the information he is explaining in the article.
Mark Ursino

Web Design+ - 0 views

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    Tips and advice on web standards development
Mark Ursino

The Smart Hiring Standard - 0 views

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    "Hire only those who are smarter than you."
Mark Ursino

OAuth.net - 0 views

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    OAuth.net is a .net library which provides full OAuth consumer and provider support. The library facilitates secure API authentication in a simple and standard method for desktop and web applications.
Mark Ursino

The C5 Generic Collection Library for C# and CLI - 0 views

shared by Mark Ursino on 17 Feb 10 - Cached
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    C5 provides functionality and data structures not provided by the standard .Net System.Collections.Generic namespace, such as persistent tree data structures, heap based priority queues, hash indexed array lists and linked lists, and events on collection changes
Mark Ursino

CSScaffold - 0 views

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    CSScaffold is a CSS framework written in PHP. Rather than try and create a static framework that uses the standard abilities of CSS, like Blueprint, it uses PHP to extend CSS. The syntax looks and feels exactly like CSS, except that you have some new, powerful abilities.
Mark Ursino

jQuery Form Framework - jFormer - 0 views

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    jFormer is a form framework written on top of jQuery that allows you to quickly generate beautiful, standards compliant forms. Leveraging the latest techniques in web design, jFormer helps you create web forms that: * Validate client-side * Validate server-side * Process without changing pages (using AJAX)
Mark Ursino

Normalize CSS - 0 views

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    Normalize.css is a customisable CSS file that makes browsers render all elements more consistently and in line with modern standards. We researched the differences between default browser styles in order to precisely target only the styles that need normalizing.
Mark Ursino

Uni-Form - 0 views

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    Uni-Form is an attempt to standardize form markup (xhtml) and css, "modularize" it, so even people with only basic knowledge of these technologies can get nice looking, well structured, highly customizable, semantic, accessible and usable forms.
Mark Ursino

Vanilla Open-Source Forum Software - 0 views

shared by Mark Ursino on 01 Dec 09 - Cached
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    Vanilla is an open-source, standards-compliant, multi-lingual, theme-able, pluggable discussion forum for the web.
Douglas Couto

jQuery plugin: Tablesorter 2.0 - 1 views

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    "tablesorter is a jQuery plugin for turning a standard HTML table with THEAD and TBODY tags into a sortable table without page refreshes. tablesorter can successfully parse and sort many types of data including linked data in a cell."
mgraber

ASP.NET QuickStart Tutorials - 0 views

  • Securing Non-ASP.NET Files
  • ASP.NET handles requests for file extensions that are normally associated with ASP.NET, while IIS handles requests for all other file extensions. By default this means common file extensions such as .aspx and .asmx are processed by ASP.NET. This processing includes authentication and authorization to ASP.NET files. Sometimes though, a developer wants non-ASP.NET resources to be processed by ASP.NET. One reason for processing non-ASP.NET files through ASP.NET is to allow ASP.NET authentication and authorization to control access to these types of files. The combination of IIS6 on Windows Server 2003 and ASP.NET 2.0 provides the most flexibility for running the ASP.NET pipeline as part of processing a request for a non-ASP.NET resource. IIS6 includes support that allows ASP.NET 2.0 to perform authentication and authorization steps, and to then hand off the remainder of the processing of a non-ASP.NET resource back to IIS6. For example, it is possible to authenticate access to an ASP page using ASP.NET forms authentication, authorize access with ASP.NET's Url authorization and still allow the ASP ISAPI extension (asp.dll) to execute the ASP page. This support is possible because IIS6 introduced a new server support function for ISAPI extensions: HSE_REQ_EXEC_URL. Assume that a directory structure contains a mix of both ASP and ASP.NET files. The ASP.NET pages are used to log a user in with forms authentication, while the ASP pages represent the rest of the application. Using the IIS6 MMC, right-click on directory and create an application (this is the same step that is necessary when setting up a standard ASP.NET application). After an application has been created, click on the Configuration button that is located on the Directory property page. This will cause the Application Configuration dialog to be displayed. New to IIS6 is a feature called wildcard application mapping. The bottom of the Application Configuration dialog allows you to configure this feature. First determine the path for the ASP.NET ISAPI extension that processes ASP.NET files such as .aspx files. You can find this path by looking at the extensions that are listed in the Application Extensions list shown in the top half of the Application Configuration dialog. Click on the row in the list that maps the .aspx extension, and select the Edit button. In the dialog that pops up, highlight the text in the Executable textbox and copy it to the clipboard. Then cancel out of the dialog. Next, click the Insert button that is in the bottom half of the Application Configuration dialog. A dialog box titled Add/Edit Application Extension Mapping will be displayed. In the Executable text box, enter the path to the ASP.NET ISAPI extension that you copied to the clipboard earlier. The end result should look something like the screenshot below.
  • Click OK to close out all of the dialogs. Now whenever a request is made for any file, the request will first be processed by ASP.NET. If the web.config for your ASP.NET application has enabled forms authentication, an unauthenticated request for a .asp file will first trigger a redirect to the login page configured for forms authentication. After a user has successfully logged in, they will be redirected back to the original .asp page. When the now-authenticated user requests the .asp page, ASP.NET will first run through the FormsAuthenticationModule to verify that the forms authentication cookie exists and is still valid. If this check passes, ASP.NET will hand processing of the .asp page back to IIS6, at which point IIS6 will pass the request on to the ISAPI extension that normally process .asp pages. In this case the extension is asp.dll and the ASP page will then run to completion. The reason ASP.NET will pass the request back to IIS6 is that non-ASP.NET resources will fall through the list of configured <httpHandlers> to the following entry: <add path="*" verb="GET,HEAD,POST" type="System.Web.DefaultHttpHandler" validate="True" /> The DefaultHttpHandler is responsible for handing requests back to IIS6 for further processing.
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    "Securing Non-ASP.NET Files"
mgraber

Sitecore CMS Blog: Sitecore Searcher and Advanced Database Crawler - 0 views

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    A preview release of a component that extends the standard Sitecore Searching mechanisms, specifically, the relatively "new" Sitecore.Search namespace introduced in 6.0 and provides easy search querying APIs
Mark Ursino

QuirksBlog: CSS vendor prefixes considered harmful - 0 views

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    CSS property vendor prefixes
Mark Ursino

Not Supported - Snook.ca - 0 views

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    CSS property vendor prefixes
Eric Famiglietti

Sitecore 5.3 Field References - 0 views

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    Overview of the standard data types used in Sitecore 5.3. You need to be a member of the Sitecore Developer Network to access this page.
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