October 9, 2010

jQuery intellisense in Visual Studio 2008


To enable intellisense completion for jQuery within VS you'll want to follow three steps:
Step 1: Install VS 2008 SP1
VS 2008 SP1 adds richer JavaScript intellisense support to Visual Studio, and adds code completion support for a broad range of JavaScript libraries.
You can download VS 2008 SP1 and Visual Web Developer 2008 Express SP1 here.
Step 2: Install VS 2008 Patch KB958502 to Support "-vsdoc.js" Intellisense Files
Two weeks ago we shipped a patch that you can apply to VS 2008 SP1 and VWD 2008 Express SP1 that causes Visual Studio to check for the presence of an optional "-vsdoc.js" file when a JavaScript library is referenced, and if present to use this to drive the JavaScript intellisense engine.
These annotated "-vsdoc.js" files can include XML comments that provide help documentation for JavaScript methods, as well as additional code intellisense hints for dynamic JavaScript signatures that cannot automatically be inferred.  You can learn more about this patch here.  You can download it for free here.
Step 3: Download the jQuery-vsdoc.js file
We've worked with the jQuery team to put together a jQuery-vsdoc.js file that provides help comments and support for JavaScript intellisense on chained jQuery selector methods.  You can download both jQuery and the jQuery-vsdoc file from the official download page on the jQuery.com site:
step1 Save the jquery-vsdoc.js file next to your jquery.js file in your project (and make sure its naming prefix matches the jquery file name):step2 You can then reference the standard jquery file with an html <script/> element like so:step3
Or alternatively reference it using the <asp:scriptmanager/> control, or by adding a /// <reference/> comment at the top of a standalone .js file.
When you do this VS will now look for a -vsdoc.js file in the same directory as the script file you are referencing, and if found will use it for help and intellisense.  The annotated
For example, we could use jQuery to make a JSON based get request, and get intellisense for the method (hanging off of $.):
step4 step5 step6 step7

October 6, 2010

Insufficient available memory to meet the expected demands of an operation at this time, possibly due to virtual address space fragmentation


                        This message appears when Visual Studio crashes and virtual memory is low. However, this does not mean that that the virtual memory on your system is low, but rather that Visual Studio is running out of address space. Most commonly, this error occurs on machines with 32-bit operating systems, which limit Visual Studio to a 2GB address space. On 64-bit systems, the error is rare.

There is possibly a solution for this problem from Microsoft.

Download this Microsoft Hotfix:: Click here