The Morning Brew #1326
Posted by Chris Alcock on Tuesday 2nd April 2013 at 08:39 am | Tagged as: .NET, Development, Morning Brew
Software
- jQuery Adds Support for Windows Store Apps, Creates New Opportunities for JavaScript Open Source Developers & Windows Store app support in jQuery version 2.0 – Olivier Bloch discusses the improved support for using jQuery as a part of the Windows 8 Store application HTML5 stack that will be included in jQuery 2.0
- Announcing TypeScript 0.8.3.1 – TypeScript – Jonathan Turner announces a bugdfix release to TypeScript 0.8.3, which addresses an editor performance issue
Information
- Monads, part eleven – Eric Lippert continues his fabulous adventure through Monads following on from comments left on the previous instalment with a look at some more general sequence rules.
- My relationship with SOLID – Seeing I to I & The overloaded D – Rob Ashton rounds out his series of posts looking at the SOLID principles with a look at the Interface Segregation and Dependency Inversion principles, discussing the principle, his real world experiences of the patterns, and his thoughts on each
- Security Code Review Techniques – SQL Injection Edition – Jonathan Rozenblit shares a guest post from Sherif Koussa on the most common of security flaws in Web Applications – SQL Injection
- WebAPI Tip #6: Is This Stuff Only Good For CRUD? – K. Scott Allen discusses the myth that Web API and HTTP Verb Support is only good fro CRUD (Create Read Update Delete) Operations
- Angry Birds of JavaScript: Yellow Bird – RequireJS – Elijah Manor continues his Angry Birds inspired series with a look at the use of RequireJS to manage dependencies and provide a speed improvement to your applications.
- Pinching pennies when scaling in The Cloud – Scott Hanselman discusses the new opportunity for profiling your code to save money when cloud hosting, taking a look at an example from the recent chages to his Blog and Podcast site.
Community
- Speaking in Bristol April 10th – Kate Gregory is visiting the UK, and will be presenting two sessions at the Bristol based .NET Developers Network usergroup on the 10th April, with a session on being a better developer using Visual Studio, and a look at why you should consider C++ in 2013
Chris, thanks for your daily dose of Microsoft/development related news items. I read your blog almost every weekday, and it suddenly occurred to me that I’ve never thanked you for this.
So I’d like to say a very sincere “thank you” for your daily effort!