I deleted an old ASP.NET Web Application project called nPower.Ignition.WebResponsive from my solution in Visual Studio, but when I added a new Web Site project in the same spot, I saw (1) appended at the end of my desired name. I tried to delete and recreate a few more times, and now I'm to the point where it looks like this in my solution explorer, with (3) appended on the end of my desired name!
Is Visual Studio remembering that I used to have a project with that name in my solution, even though I've deleted it, and trying to avoid a conflict by giving it a different name? Is there a way I can get rid of the number appended at the end? I understand it probably won't make much of a difference from a programming standpoint if I leave the name as is, but it looks quite sloppy!
This occurs because each time you create a Web Site project using IIS Express, VS adds a new entry to IIS Express' applicationhost.config (C:\Users\YourName\Documents\IISExpress\config\applicationhost.config). Each website needs to be unique, so VS will append and increment the number following the name.
I believe what is happening is that when you delete it from VS, some part is remaining on your hard disk, either the SLN file or the folder. So, when you create a new one, it sees it already exists and adds the number.
After having my computer's hard disk replaced by a SSD (with the use of a disk cloning tool), my VS 2015 weirdly stopped executing automatically as administrator, and since the defined website port was 1000, it no more had permission to use that port. Hence, it was always creating an identical entry in $(SolutionDir).vs\config\applicationhost.config, just to set a new port (above 50000). Only when I configured it to start as administrator again, I was able to open the solution without having the website renamed to "___(1)".
Just out of curiosity - what does the number represent? At first I thought it was simply the version/year, because I saw some 10's and some 8's (I have vs 2010 and 2008) but, then why do I have some 9's aswell?
It's what version of Visual Studio the solution was created with. 10 is for Visual Studio 2010, 9 is for Visual Studio 2008, 8 was for 2005, and 7 was for 2003. You might seen an 8 sometimes with VS 2008 if you set it to target .Net 2.0 features only, but that usually means you found an older solution file somewhere.
Is there an easy way to find the number of classes contained within a visual studio solution? Other than writing a funky find script, I couldn't find a way to do it within the code metrics piece of VS.
You could use a free tool like SourceMonitor, which has a reasonable set of metrics including number of classes. You could also use a tool like NDepend which is a lot more powerful, but also costs money. Either can be integrated into your build environment if you're using MSBuild or NAnt.
I haven't used these tools before, but they probably have some facility that can help you. Basically any code metrics package can help. VS 2008 was supposed to have a built in code metrics tool, but I think it was nixed for one reason or another.
I have a footer with link able info, I have my telephone number and my email address, and would like these too be able too be clicked and be usable. Ie bring up a external pop up call now link or a email now link
If anything appears out of order, you can always edit the flow, following the instructions here. Once the flow is validated and saved, any numbers assigned to the flow will reflect the changes you've made.
My mouse setting (see below) allow me to scroll 3 lines of macros in PC SAS. However, it skipped 24 lines in SAS studio which is not friendly for me to read the macros comprehensively. Is there a way to control the lines skipped when rolling once?
Yes, i can confirm that scrolling is bad in Edge/Chrome (same code under the hood), IE is as crappy as always. Firefox performs better than IE, but scrolling is not working as expected. Please open a track with sas tech support.
For exact confirmation of version number you can check for the file "DiagnosticsHub.StandardCollector.Runtime.dll" in the location C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio 14.0\Team Tools\DiagnosticsHub\Collector and right click on properties. It will show the version number
If you try install "Remote tools for Visual Studio 2015 Update 3" after updated to latest, it will not "update" the IDE that is already is later versions and will just update whatever components in older versions instead.
How do you reason about this? What would be the use case for having multiple instances for one data scientist? Would that happen if an individual is working on multiple projects, which have different kernels and library dependencies?
Hi @yann_stoneman, you're right. Up to 4 apps can run on the same instances, so different kernels could still be run on the same instance. For example, a data scientist could be working on a tabular use case, and an image processing use case - so they might have a CPU and GPU instance running. Or they might use a larger instance for data processing or data wrangler feature.
Depending on your data scientists' projects and use cases, I'd account for at most 2 instances per data scientist running concurrently. If your users already use SageMaker Notebook Instances, you can use the commonly used resource type as the Studio instance resource type for estimates - that way you can get a closer estimate to the actual costs.
If you're allowing for shared spaces (real time collaboration), include additional instances in your estimate - the users will now be able to use a private space through their user profile (unique to one user) and a shared space (this instance can be accessed across profiles).
I'd also recommend using a plugin to shut down idle instances as a best practice when your teams are onboarded to Studio, so these instances are shut down if there are no notebooks actively running (ref: -learning/save-costs-by-automatically-shutting-down-idle-resources-within-amazon-sagemaker-studio/)
Yes! The hard limit on that is 4 apps per instance as of today. One more call out is that a user cannot run two instances of the same type, i.e., only one instance of any given instance type allowed per user profile (without using shared spaces).
The issue is - Jupyter Notebook is not ready for that, both users will have the same privileges, no tracking who did what, ... And working on the same notebook on the same time - basically they will overwrite each other saves.
When you open any table that is not from a Postgres database in the table viewer, SAS Studio 3.7x and SAS Studio 3.8x can limit the number of rows that are selected from the table in the following ways:
When you open a Postgres table in the table viewer in SAS Studio 3.7x and 3.8x, there is no limit applied to the number of rows that are selected from the table. Regardless of your preference setting, SAS Studio retrieves all rows from the table. The number of rows displayed on each page of the table viewer is still determined by the criteria above. However, the act of retrieving all rows can cause significant performance delays when you are opening very large Postgres tables.
I have a software must configured with Parallel Studio XE 2019(or old versions), I can't find any new method indicating how to configured with the Intel oneAPI Toolkits. So that's big problem for me if the Parallel Studio XE 2019 can't release serial number for me !
Hello, please note that earlier we used to provide free licenses and free software packages to Educators, Students, and Researchers to install Intel Parallel Studio XE. Now, with the transition to Intel oneAPI, we do not provide free licenses. Students, Educators, Researchers can download and install Intel oneAPI software package for free without a license. And only the most recent releases of the Toolkits will be made available.
However, if you wish you can apply for an academic license, we suggest you to email the academic department directly at academicdev...@intel.com (this may take up to two weeks for a response).
Intel does not verify all solutions, including but not limited to any file transfers that may appear in this community. Accordingly, Intel disclaims all express and implied warranties, including without limitation, the implied warranties of merchantability, fitness for a particular purpose, and non-infringement, as well as any warranty arising from course of performance, course of dealing, or usage in trade.
There is a folded sheet of paper in the box that had the serial numbers on it. It has them listed twice and they are on labels so they can be removed and stuck somewhere else. I always put one of the labels on the DVD envelop of the install disc. I also keep all my software install disc in a signal box. Only thing in my life I have semi-organized.
Combine a guided tour of the Frank Lloyd Wright Home and Studio with an outdoor self-guided audio walking tour of the surrounding Historic District. See the famed homes that were designed in Wright's studio. Excellent value for a more comprehensive experience. Tours may be taken in any order. Self-guided outdoor tours are available in eight languages (English, Chinese, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Portuguese, and Spanish).
For tickets purchased online or over the phone, guests must check-in at the Museum Shop before joining their tour. Guests will not be allowed to join a tour without checking-in first. We recommend arriving to the Museum Shop no later than 15 minutes before the start time of your tour or event.
7fc3f7cf58