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Part 1 - The Problem
Part 2 - Take this for example...
Part 3 - Time for some code
Part 4 - Why doesn't this work?
Part 5 - The Remedy
Part 6 - Putting it to work
Putting it to work
So, using this code, you could embed in your Feature receiver a web.config file that looks like the aforementioned fragment. Read in ...
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Part 1 - The ProblemPart 2 - Take this for example...Part 3 - Time for some codePart 4 - Why doesn't this work?Part 5 - The RemedyPart 6 - Putting it to work The Remedy
Ok, so now the Name property is only an XPath expression if it’s a child node. Then what do we do with sections that have attributes? They must be child nodes, and so created ...
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Part 1 - The Problem
Part 2 - Take this for example...
Part 3 - Time for some code
Part 4 - Why doesn't this work?
Part 5 - The Remedy
Part 6 - Putting it to work
Why doesn't this work?
My code would step through this XML, and at each node generate a new SPWebConfigModification. The <location ...
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Part 1 - The Problem
Part 2 - Take this for example...
Part 3 - Time for some code
Part 4 - Why doesn't this work?
Part 5 - The Remedy
Part 6 - Putting it to work
Time for some code
I wrote some recursive code to load an xml document and from that document generate SPWebConfigModification objects. Basically, you ...
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Part 1 - The Problem
Part 2 - Take this for example...
Part 3 - Time for some code
Part 4 - Why doesn't this work?
Part 5 - The Remedy
Part 6 - Putting it to work
Take this for example...
You write a feature to be installed and you make web.config modifications that include adding a section. Later, that feature ...
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Part 1 - The Problem
Part 2 - Take this for example...
Part 3 - Time for some code
Part 4 - Why doesn't this work?
Part 5 - The Remedy
Part 6 - Putting it to work
The Problem
I've read a lot of posts [this, this, and this, for example] about the SPWebConfigModification beast and I've had a lot of time developing a ...
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I've only recently begun working as the Build Czar here at Atalasoft, and immediately there are pains. The builds (from what I see) are really complicated. True: building a very complicated product is going to be complicated; however, it's thought that I can work myself out of this job, making it everyone's responsibility not just one ...
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