Its Urgent
i want to design a message board in asp .net , same
as the one which we have at mega-tokyo.com,
pls suggest recommended readings, pointers on web
or any relevant code for study or any tips
many thanks
suhmaamiar
message board in asp .net
Re:message board in asp .net
Personally I don't know why you would need to make a board like this, you can download it at http://yabb.info
Re:message board in asp .net
many thanks but i am still interested in asp .net
based design ;D
based design ;D
Re:message board in asp .net
Why make a board like this if you already have on here?
This board is php.
This board is php.
Re:message board in asp .net
i do believe that asp .net means asp .net NOT php
pls help me rather then suggesting me to work with
a php based board
plsssssssssssss any body
pls help me rather then suggesting me to work with
a php based board
plsssssssssssss any body
Re:message board in asp .net
http://www.dougdean.com/EZsiteForumSiteDEV.htm
I searched on google and found this. The google search actully pulled up a lot. It appears that this may help you out though. It's not exactly like this...but perhaps the author could point you in the right direction.
good luck,
-junc
I searched on google and found this. The google search actully pulled up a lot. It appears that this may help you out though. It's not exactly like this...but perhaps the author could point you in the right direction.
good luck,
-junc
Snoopy questions, and a rant on relevance
I think what Tom wanted to know was why you wanted reinvent the wheel; it was just a matter of snoopy curiosity, as recreating something 'just like' one that exists already, but in a different implementation language, is a pointless exercise unless there were a specific reason for it. Given that these message boards are not trivial to implement (not a major project, but not a quick hack either), you would have to have some fairly good reasons to do so.Suhmaamiar wrote: many thanks but i am still interested in asp .net
based design ;D
Were you looking to do it as practice at ASP .NET, or did you have some particular .NET functionality that can't be done otherwise? Or some other purpose? That was, I think, the thrust of Tom's posting.
Don't feel obligated to answer; as long as your reasons are enough for you, that should be enough for the rest of us. However, I doubt you'll find many here have much experience with .NET applications, at least not yet.
Also, if your are doing it just for the sake of doing it in .NET, with no other purpose than to have a .NET implementation, I would dissuade you from it. The biggest annoyance I have with many companies in general and Microsoft in particular is that they bandy about the names of their implementation tools or philosophies as buzzwords ("Our new frammistat is OBJECT ORIENTED!!!") in advertising aimed at general consumers, for no reason other than to obfuscate and confuse the real technical issues. Who cares how a program was written, as long as the best possible job was done to make it usable, stable, secure and efficient (in that order of importance, for most casual users)? How does .NET make Word any better, from the perspective of, say, a paralegal typing out a contract? Or PhotoShop from the perspective of a graphic artist? They could be coded in Intercal for all any of the users could care!
The only people for whom the implementation languages, tools and paradigms are important are the programmers who actually had the job of implemented it, and to a lesser extent, those who need to interface with it later. The casual user neither understands nor cares those issues, and indeed should not have to, so long as the program meets their needs with as few glitches as possible. Making a big deal of it like that is pure cybercrud.