I need to find the "SQLite.UAP.2015, Version=3.10.2". as it had some features working that the current version does not as PRAGMA key.
I tried rebuilding the download link from:
http://sqlite.org/2016/sqlite-uwp-3130000.vsix
as there is not any history in the webpage of previous dll's:
http://sqlite.org/2015/sqlite-uap-3102000.vsix
That does not work.How do I rebuild the link or Where can I find or can download the old Visual Studio Extension?
Regards.
I found the link using the way back machine.
https://web.archive.org/web/20160202165309/http://www.sqlite.org/download.html
Here's the direct link:
http://www.sqlite.org/2016/sqlite-uap-3100200.vsix
Related
I have a Ajax File Upload Control on a user control. I have added the user control to the web page.
According to this article https://ajaxcontroltoolkit.codeplex.com/workitem/27149
I tried the following steps
a) download the ajaxcontrolkit from the site and replaced references
I could not find the AjaxFileUpload.pre.js file to make the changes suggested on the link
b) Downloaded the latest source but can't find the ajaxfileupload.pre.js file in it.
You need to download source code of AjaxControlToolKit from link and you can open the solution in visual studio and find the file. And you can Build the solution and get the latest DLL from this solution's bin folder as well.
that link says the problem was fixed in the september 2012 release. can you update?
i think i'm using the december 2013 version and haven't had a problem iirc.
there's also another fix on your link (https://ajaxcontroltoolkit.codeplex.com/workitem/27149) at the very bottom of the page. i suppose it depends on how you use the query string.
I feel guilty asking a question like this around here, but I'm at a loss and would appreciate some help.
A proof-of-concept like web application was built on one PC and put up on a repo to download on another PC at a different location. There was originally an auto-build feature set up where Azure would build and publish automatically on check-in, but that was removed. Things were working on both ends until one side included a bulk of excluded changes. Now I'm seeing the following error:
The "Microsoft.CodeAnalysis.BuildTasks.Csc" task could not be
loaded from the assembly
...\packages\Microsoft.Net.Compilers.1.0.0\build..\tools\Microsoft.Build.Tasks.CodeAnalysis.dll.
Could not load file or assembly
'file:///...\packages\Microsoft.Net.Compilers.1.0.0\tools\Microsoft.Build.Tasks.CodeAnalysis.dll'
or one of its dependencies. The system cannot find the file specified.
Confirm that the declaration is correct, that the assembly
and all its dependencies are available, and that the task contains a
public class that implements Microsoft.Build.Framework.ITask.
Does anyone have any suggestions on where to begin looking for the issue?
It turns out that NuGet packages were committed to the repository and breaking everything. Deleting the project\project\packages directory from the repo solved all build problems since NuGet fetches the packages automatically on build.
I got this error when I created a new branch for my project.
It drove me crazy for an hour. I tried most of the suggestions over the internet including the accepted answer to this question.
I then closed the project, opened it again, cleaned it and the error is gone. So this means this could be cache issue.
Anyways, just wanted to share.
I too tried the top answer with no luck so deleted the contents of my bin and packages dir, closed and re-opened VS and everything fine now.
I have tried all solutions described before, but none worked.
What solved it for me, was to update the Microsoft.Net.Compilers from the NuGet Package Manager
Right-click on your solution.
Go to Manage Nuget Packages.
Search for Microsoft.Net.Compilers.
Install or update on dependent projects as necessary.
Re-build, clean solution and restart Visual Studio worked for me.
Deleting the package and cleaning the solution solved it for me.
Deleting these three directories solves the problem.
/packages
/bin
/obj
NOTE: delete both /bin and /obj from all projects included in the solution (including Test projects).
Problem hides on TFS, you need to remove folder TestProject...\packages from TFS, check in, delete it from your local dir and build again. Worked!
Use the below step:
1) Delete the package folder.
2) close the visual studio.
3) open the project and rebuild the project.
I delete all from packages folder and rebuild solution. It's worked for me.
In my case: this works for me.
It turns out my teammate had already started looking into Windows 10 development and had Microsoft Build Tools 2015 installed on his machine.
I installed the software from https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/details.aspx?id=48159 and the problem was solved.
In my case, the solution was:
Use Windows Explorer and navigate to the offending path:
C:\MyApplication\Code\Main\ABCProject\ABCProject.UI\Bin
Right click on bin folder > select properties > Uncheck ReadOnly.
In my case, the solution was:
Right Click on Solution.
Go to Manage Nuget Packages for this Solution.
Search for Microsoft.CodeDom.Providers.DotNetCompilerPlatform.
Uninstall the searched Package.
Restart the Visual Studio.
I just tried this on a clean install of a Windows 10 machine and the issue for me ended up being that I didn't have the .NET 3.5 framework installed. This stackoverflow question helps explain why.
Cannot build WIX project on windows 10
Right Click on Solution.
Go to Manage Nuget Packages for this Solution.
Search forMicrosoft.Net.Compilers on Browse Section.
Deleting the bin folder worked for me
In vs2017 community there appeared a new item in the "build" menu. It disappeared after I used it and was called something like "Optimise project build packages". I clicked it and it fixed everything, just restart etc. I did it on two machines.
What it did was removed Microsoft.net.compilers 2.10.0 and replaced with Microsoft.CodeDom.Providers.DotNetCompilerPlatform 2.0.1
So there you go - more automagic...
My project was built with .Net Core 2.2 but I had .Net core 3.0 preview installed. I uninstalled .Net Core 3.0 from my system and went through all my class libraries, removing Microsoft.Net.Compilers 3.0, then rebuilt and it worked.
I moved my solution from one drive to another, and one of the files could not be copied because "in used", for which I click ignored, producing the error described in this post. Copying the missing file manually fixed it.
file: Microsoft.Build.Tasks.CodeAnalysis.dll
Destination directory: packages\Microsoft.Net.Compilers.2.1.0\tools
For me I was trying to open a MVC5 project in VS 2013 and I was getting this error, Opened it in VS 2017 and up it worked just fine.
I need to get the source code for this, but unfortunately, I can't find links to it on jquerytools.org. The forum on that site is also down. Does anyone know where I can get this source or unminify it?
Thanks,
Rob
Have you tried going on http://jquerytools.org/download/? (I mean appending '/download/' to the url you posted)
EDIT: However you can download the source from Git, got to the link and click "clone" or "zip".
EDIT: No, it's the 1.2.7 version, as you can see in the "tag" link they tagged the 1.2.7 version about 7 months ago, this is the version you need as far as I can read in your question, if you are not convinced than I suggest you this link (that is the link near "Tagging version 1.2.7" in the github project's tag page):
https://github.com/jquerytools/jquerytools/zipball/v1.2.7
clicking on the link above you will start to download jquerytools v1.2.7 in a .zip file
It has become very difficult to find the source code for jQueryTools, and since the original CDN provided by the author has now disappeared a lot of sites that were calling the toolset from the CDN in question have stopped working.
There is a useful resource at https://cdnjs.com/libraries/jquery-tools/1.2.7 that provides CDN/download links for all version of jQueryTools back to v1.2.0, which although it is not a source repository, can at least help some people with legacy sites still running to keep them running whilst they find an alternate solution or replace the website.
newbie here, sorry if this is an obvious question.
I have never used SQLite before. According to this page, the latest version of System.Data.SQLite should be downloaded from http://system.data.sqlite.org/.
But I couldn't find a download link. Should I download the source code then compile it on my local machine? If so, could you please tell me where to download the source code? Sorry, I have no idea what "Branches", "Leaves", "trunks" mean.
Thanks!
I just had this same issue. You can get the source code from here. It builds fine for me in VS2010.
Try this link instead: http://sqlite.phxsoftware.com/
The new http://system.data.sqlite.org/ site is the integrated web-server of a Fossil repository. Therefore it exposes SCM functionality like branches in its web-interface. You may take a look at fossil at: http://www.fossil-scm.org/
The latest System.data.sqlite binaries are available at
http://system.data.sqlite.org/index.html/doc/trunk/www/downloads.wiki
It has instructions/info and the latest binary versions for the variations of .Net and Visual Studio.
For one of the solutions, I don't see the Clean Solution option neither in the context menu when I right click on the solution name in the Solution Explorer nor in the Build menu. When I make any changes to the project and debug, VS never hits the break point and I get the "The breakpoint will not currently be hit. The source code is different from the original version." message. My understanding is that I need to clean the solution.
For other solutions, I do see the Clean solution and I don't have the same issue.
If you are using website project then their wont be clean solution option,it's available only with web application projects.
Finally had to create a brand new solution and add the projects from the older solution to the newly created one. Not sure what the problem was, but this helped.
I also faced the similar problem recently and this is what I came to.
I guess you are running an older code version than the one you want to debug on. Rebuild the project(s), paying attention to dependencies. Use the "Rebuild" feature.
If it's a Web application project, just clean it yourself by nuking all DLLs in the bin. Then rebuild. I assume it builds without errors?
If you're running a web site, as apposed to a web application project, you probably don't have an actual solution, or even a project file.
For a web site, you need to rebuild the website (from the build menu), or manually delete all of the dlls to accomplish the same thing.
Edit:
How are you debugging? Are you using Cassini (the built in visual studio debugger), or attaching to an IIS process?
I would also try this:
Go to C:\WINDOWS\Microsoft.NET\Framework\v2.0.50727\Temporary ASP.NET Files and delete the folder that has the same name as your website.
I had the same problem. Visual Studio was building my old code with debug. I opened a new instance of Visual Studio and opened my solution with it and it now works fine. No idea what happened.
You can also clean using devenv /clean SolnConfigName SolutionName in the command line environment.
Here is the reference: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/vstudio/aa718635.aspx
For a website solution, just clean your web browser history and the Cache there.