A Guide To VB 2008: Figure 1: Explore Schema Driven IntelliSense.

One cool feature in VB9 is schema-driven IntelliSense when working with XML axis properties. Simply add a schema to your project, and you'll automatically get the schema elements to appear in IntelliSense automatically. As you work further down the tree, the IntelliSense filters the elements shown to only those accessible from the current branch. A Guide To VB 2008: Figure 1: Explore Schema Driven IntelliSense.
comments powered by Disqus

Featured

  • VS Code 1.127 Further Integrates Advanced Browser-AI Tech

    Microsoft's July 1 Visual Studio Code update continues a recent push to make the editor's integrated browser a more capable development surface -- and a more useful tool for AI agents.

  • Support Vector Regression with SGD Training Using C#

    Support vector regression can predict numeric values effectively, and this article shows how to implement and train a kernel SVR model in C# using stochastic sub-gradient descent.

  • New GitHub Switch Limits Repo Issue Creation to Collaborators Only

    After publicly touting pull request limits as a way to cut maintainer noise, GitHub is taking the same idea further with a new setting that lets repository admins restrict issue creation to collaborators only.

  • Uno Platform Helps Ship First Stable SkiaSharp 4.0 Release for 2D .NET Graphics

    SkiaSharp 4.148.0 is the first stable v4 release, bringing a newer Skia engine, API cleanup, performance work and a Microsoft-Uno co-maintenance model.

Subscribe on YouTube