I recently ran across an obscure feature of .NET that appeared to be returning false positives for Enumberable.All(). The issue: a client wanted to display
![](https://allthingsdave.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/pexels-photo-374918.jpeg?w=600&h=280&crop=1)
Improving The World One Idea At A Time.
I recently ran across an obscure feature of .NET that appeared to be returning false positives for Enumberable.All(). The issue: a client wanted to display
Updated: I’ve added more based on feedback. Full stack web development is hard. I do plenty of front end/client side development but not frequently enough to commit
Visual Studio has a neat little trick to generate POCO’s from XML or JSON. VS allows you to paste XML or JSON as classes. Open
As a consultant I get pulled back into the wonderful world of ASP.NET Web Forms. I recently had a trip down memory lane with the
How did a simple Easter Egg hunt morph (over the course of several years) into a full-blown, augmented reality scavenger hunt? Simple. I was born
Filing this under nifty things I don’t want to forget. The T-SQL equivalent of C#’s, String.IsNullOrEmpty():