Nick Dunham, an EntitySpaces user, created a very nice PDF and sent it to us. We thought it was great and decided to share it on our blog. Here is a snippet from the document ...
EntitySpaces 2009 (ES) works great for setting up and running projects from within Visual Studio (VS). Once I have a project set up, I can execute it by opening “Tools | EntitySpaces”, load my project, and go. As a companion to this, I started using the new command line version of EntitySpaces so I could skip the basic steps (once I configured my project with the tool). The setup instructions below allow me to execute an ES project using the External Tools features of VS ...
Checkout the PDF file HERE or a ZIP file HERE. It's best viewed when zoomed to around 150% to 175% depending on your monitor size.
Nick W. Dunham, University of FloridaOffice of Research, Director of Information Services
From Mobile Devices to large scale enterprise solutions in need of serious transaction support, EntitySpaces can meet your needs. Whether you’re writing an ASP.NET application with Medium Trust requirements, a Mono application, or a Windows.Forms application, the EntitySpaces architecture is there for you. EntitySpaces is provider independent, which means that you can run the same binary code against any of the supported databases. EntitySpaces is available in both C# and VB.NET. EntitySpaces uses no reflection, no XML files, and sports a tiny foot print of less than 200k. Pound for pound, EntitySpaces is one tough, dependable .NET architecture.
EntitySpaces LLCPersistence Layer and Business Objects for Microsoft .NEThttp://www.entityspaces.net
Page rendered at Tuesday, March 16, 2010 6:32:58 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
Disclaimer The opinions expressed herein are my own personal opinions and do not represent my employer's view in any way.