Learn about the Application Settings feature of Windows Forms, for example how to create and store settings data on behalf of your application and your users.
NEsper is a CLR-based component for building CEP and ESP engines. NEsper is based upon the Esper baseline, but includes customizations that are specific to the .NET CLR.
Validate and benchmark your .NET regular expressions here in this lightweight Silverlight application. Your regular expression matches will be highlighted as you type.
Razor 2.0 template engine that works outside MVC and that supports layouts (masterpages) and _ViewStart, like ASP.NET MVC.; Author: Jaap Lamfers; Updated: 17 Nov 2012; Section: Libraries; Chapter: Platforms, Frameworks & Libraries; Updated: 17 Nov 2012
Software development tool designed for computer users to give them the ability to create any software they need without previous knowledge of computer programming where the user will start to learn how to program and will understand the programming concepts using this tool step by step and without the need to write code by hand at all where the programming done through general purpose visual programming languages. Unlike other visual programming languages, PWCT is not limited and target also professional and mainstream programmers by giving them more productivity than traditional text-based programming languages. Programming Without Coding Technology is a Free-Open Source Visual Programming Languages Framework to create new General Purpose Visual Programming Languages (VPLs) that are a practical alternative to Text based Programming Languages (TPLs). PWCT comes with four general purpose visual programming languages (HarbourPWCT, PythonPWCT, C#PWCT, and SupernovaPWCT).
an advanced C++ application framework that makes it easy to produce powerful C++ applications. The framework is a based on a thoroughly modern C++ design and has built in support for Rapid Application Development (RAD).
M. Aiken, M. Fähndrich, C. Hawblitzel, G. Hunt, and J. Larus. MSPC '06: Proceedings of the 2006 workshop on Memory system performance and correctness, page 1--10. New York, NY, USA, ACM, (2006)