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 <lastBuildDate>Tue, 23 May 2006 16:40:46 IST</lastBuildDate> 
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 <item> 
  <title>Web.Config file Settings</title> 
  <link>http://www.dotnetanalyst.com/Articles/ASPNETArticle1.aspx</link> 
  <description>Applications of XML have been integrated into .NET to such an extent that XML is 
hardly a buzzword anymore</description> 
  <pubDate>Mon, 22 May 2006 12:40:07 GMT</pubDate> 
 </item> 
  <item> 
  <title>ASP.NET Session</title> 
  <link>http://www.dotnetanalyst.com/Articles/ASPNETArticle2.aspx</link> 
  <description>There are 3 modes of session in ASP.NET. Inproc,State server, Sql server. This 
article will explain them in detail</description> 
  <pubDate>Mon, 22 May 2006 12:40:07 GMT</pubDate> 
 </item>
 <item> 
  <title>Session management in sqlserver</title> 
  <link>http://www.dotnetanalyst.com/Articles/ASPNETArticle3.aspx</link> 
  <description>Once you start running multiple web servers for the same web site, the default 
asp.net session state, <STRONG>InProc</STRONG>, is no longer useful. </description> 
  <pubDate>Mon, 22 May 2006 12:40:07 GMT</pubDate> 
 </item> 
 <item> 
  <title>Differences Among the DataGrid, DataList, and Repeater</title> 
  <link>http://www.dotnetanalyst.com/Articles/ASPNETArticle4.aspx</link> 
  <description>The main similarity between the DataGrid, DataList, and Repeater Web controls is 
that all three have a DataSource property and a DataBind() method.</description> 
  <pubDate>Mon, 22 May 2006 12:40:07 GMT</pubDate> 
 </item> 
 <item> 
  <title>Introduction to Regular Expressions</title> 
  <link>http://www.dotnetanalyst.com/Articles/cSharpArticle1.aspx</link> 
  <description>Regular expressions consist of a series of characters and quantifiers on those 
characters. The characters themselves can be literal or can be denoted by using 
character classes, such as \d, which denotes a digit character class, or \S, 
which denotes any nonwhitespace character</description> 
  <pubDate>Mon, 22 May 2006 12:40:07 GMT</pubDate> 
 </item> 
 <item> 
  <title>Abstract Classes Vs Interfaces</title> 
  <link>http://www.dotnetanalyst.com/Articles/cSharpArticle2.aspx</link> 
  <description>The choice of whether to use an interface or an abstract can sometimes be a 
difficult one. This article shows you the differences between these two and also 
tells you when and where to use them </description> 
  <pubDate>Mon, 22 May 2006 12:40:07 GMT</pubDate> 
 </item> 
 <item> 
  <title>Remoting</title> 
  <link>http://www.dotnetanalyst.com/Articles/RemotingArticle1.aspx</link> 
  <description>Remoting is a means by which one operating system process, or program, can 
communicate with another process</description> 
  <pubDate>Mon, 22 May 2006 12:40:07 GMT</pubDate> 
 </item> 
 <item> 
  <title>WebService Return Values and Parameters</title> 
  <link>http://www.dotnetanalyst.com/Articles/WebServiceArticle1.aspx</link> 
  <description>This section illustrates that various data types can be passed to and returned 
from <B>Web Service</B> methods</description> 
  <pubDate>Mon, 22 May 2006 12:40:07 GMT</pubDate> 
 </item> 
 <item> 
  <title>Federated Servers</title> 
  <link>http://www.dotnetanalyst.com/Articles/SQLServerArticle1.aspx</link> 
  <description>SQL Server uses updatable distributed partitioned views to partition data across 
a group of servers. These servers together handle the management of the 
partitioned data but they can also operate autonomously</description> 
  <pubDate>Mon, 22 May 2006 12:40:07 GMT</pubDate> 
 </item> 
 <item> 
  <title>Data Integrity</title> 
  <link>http://www.dotnetanalyst.com/Articles/SQLServerArticle2.aspx</link> 
  <description>Enforcing data integrity ensures the quality of the data in the database  
</description> 
  <pubDate>Mon, 22 May 2006 12:40:07 GMT</pubDate> 
 </item> 
 <item>
  <title>Introduction to UML</title> 
  <link>http://www.dotnetanalyst.com/Articles/UMLArticle1.aspx</link> 
  <description>Use case diagrams describe what a system does from the view of an external 
entity. They are closely connected to scenarios </description> 
  <pubDate>Mon, 22 May 2006 12:40:07 GMT</pubDate> 
 </item> 
 <item>
 <title>Software Design Patterns</title> 
  <link>http://www.dotnetanalyst.com/Articles/UMLArticle2.aspx</link> 
  <description>Design patterns are recurring solutions to software design problems you find 
again and again in real-world application development</description> 
  <pubDate>Mon, 22 May 2006 12:40:07 GMT</pubDate> 
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