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In Linux there're many tools to read and convert the comments in code into a HTML/PDF document. I am now working on a .Net project, and I am wondering if we have similar tools to convert the comments in .Net code into a HTML/PDF document?
I tried Google, but did not give me any useful result :( Maybe I am not search with the right keywords.
You might want to look at Sandcastle: http://broadcast.oreilly.com/2010/09/build-html-documentation-for-y.html
Sandcastle is a tool that generates HTML / Visual Studio help bundles based on your code comments and actual code itself.
It's relatively easy to use once you get it set up.
But beware! Big projects can cause OutOfMemoryExceptions.
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I am looking for a parser, that can extract the abstract syntax tree from a java code. The parser must work under .Net - I need to run it from C#. I know about ANTLR, but I did not find any grammar, that can generate AST as a tree (instead of a flat list).
Can anyone help me ?
Thank you.
Ain't sure if it helps, but JavaCC can generate the AST for you, it has a few Java grammar definition (like this, but take a look on the alternatives), and the developers recently added C++ code generation. That you might be able to link with C#.
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I used NuGet to get the BCrypt library and it's installed properly. Now I'd like to read about it and how to use it, yet I can't seem to find any documentation.
Even searching for the libraries namespace yielded no results:
DevOne.Security.Cryptography.BCrypt
Any suggestions on where to find some examples, or even plain old documentation? I'm using C#.
There is no official documentation, other than this page.
That being said, you can easily look at the source code, as there are only a couple of public routines in the API.
I know this question is old, but it's still the first result on Google for "BCrypt.NET documentation".
Therefore, I'd like to expand on the answer and say the latest download of BCrypt.NET has documentation included in the release. Specifically, "BCrypt.Net.XML". Strange that it's stored in an XML file, but it explains the work factor and various methods succinctly.
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I want to represent the chemical structure drawing in my windows application. I found some softwares are available in the market like "BKChem","Metlab","ChemDraw","SMILE (Simplified molecular input line entry specification)","BioChemDraw". but unfortunately i am unable to found any of above's plug in/API's with dot net please let me know. this is very high priority for me for now.
First of all, I'm not at all a .net expert
In the field of chemical structure conversion and drawing, OpenBabel is really the broadest. Unfortunately for you, I only used it from command line, never through API.
BUT, there is a C# API for OpenBabel documented here. And it seams that it can output SVG which is an open drawing standard.
We have written a C# tool for this:
http://chem4word.codeplex.com/
It has been developed over several years and works inside .NET and MS-WORD.
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I built a GIS application around Twitter and now its getting some interest.
But one of the requirements is that they don't want any outside dependencies.
So I'll need to mimic Twitters functions.
Anyone know of any open source Twitter projects?
Laconica?
http://laconi.ca/trac/
Identica demos it nicely:
http://identi.ca/
Jaiku is a microblogging service very similar to Twitter. Google bought Jaiku a few years ago and made its engine open source. You can find it here:
http://code.google.com/p/jaikuengine/
If you're looking for a .NET alternative. There is Yonkly. Is an open source Twitter clone written using ASP.NET MVC. You can find the source here:
http://www.codeplex.com/yonkly
I have used laconi.ca in the past, it is easy to figure out and highly customizable (for how young it is).
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Does anyone know of a good .NET port of the OGNL library here? It looks like I could use something like this and the only one I have found so far is on SourceForge here and hasn't been updated since 2005.
I've been looking for something like this as well. Unfortunately, there isn't anything I'm aware of that's feasible for use in a real project. Sorry!
One suggestion that might be of help is to e-mail the author directly. Oftentimes, they abandon the project because they've found that another existing project's work is more in line with what they were trying to accomplish.