I'd like to add a Settings.settings file to a web app in VS.NET 2010. But I don't see this option. Is not available for web apps?
I think its possible. Cant remember if I created folder "Properties" and file "Settings.settings" myself though.
Related
I'm trying to create a ClickOnce deployment of a WPF app, using VS 2019. I'm testing it by having it create the Publish.htm file in a website on my machine. Here's what I have in the project's Publish Options tab:
However, when I publish from VS 2019, the publish.htm file does not get created on the website. The web.config file is there, but that's all that's there. Why isn't it creating the publish.htm file?
If test via iis, you need to fill the Publishing Folder Loaction with the physical path of iis website.
The setting of iis website,
So I made a Net Core Web app project with razor pages and javascript files, as you can see on the right of the first screenshot, but I cannot seem to publish it as a web app, only console app or windows application.
For instance, when I publish it to folder, it does not even publish my razor pages, no index.cshtml at all.
Anyone ran into this issue before?
Project properties screenshot
Published folder
Inside wwwroot folder
Razor pages .cshtml files will be embedded into the web.config file after publishing.
It seems like you are using a regular Linux FTP. Make sure you are using a windows server to publish your app on. Net Core does not work on Linux servers unless you install the Net Core runtime on the server.
I'm very familiar with how to create and manage user secrets in Visual Studio by right clicking the project in the solution explorer. And managing the
Is there a way to do this in VS Code?
Does it matter if it's on a Mac?
Is there an extension that will provide a similar experience?
Download extension i.e .NET Core User Secrets.Then right click on .csproj file of your project to get Manage user secrets file.
This may be a basic question, but I've searched for a little while and couldn't find anything specific to this.
I bought a domain and created the web app in Azure for hosting, and set up the DNS so that it's linked to the Azure Web App. Using Visual Studio 15, I opened the website via the FTP connection settings found in Azure, and was able to create files, edit the html, css, etc. Going forward, I wanted to use Web Deploy with Visual Studio to push new builds of the code up to the web site. I downloaded the publish profile from Azure, and imported it into a new visual studio project. I also copied all the previous files over(it wasn't alot). I got the correct Web Deploy settings and successfully published the solution to the Web App in Azure. However, it never updates the code with my new changes. When I look at the site in Firebug it still has the same files/code that it had when I edited it via FTP.
Any idea what I'm doing wrong?
I followed your steps and everything published perfectly for me. Did you try to simply refresh the file list to make sure Visual Studio is seeing all your files? Are they included in your project?
Also, when you go to publish, on the 4th step labeled preview, try to hit "start preview" and see if it detects any changes.
Also, could you tell me a bit more about your project? Is it a website project folder, mvc solution, etc?
You could try to clean the website to make sure your new files are getting deployed.
Clean Windows Azure Website
Visual Studio allows you to make "Web Sites" and "Web Applications", but, inside a project, can you have one within the other?
Say I have my website "www.mysite.com" and I have an application called "BudgetCalculator". One the production server, this is supposed to be located at:
www.mysite.com/BudgetCalculator
And the BudgetCalculator app contains links back to other parts of the website, like "/page1" and "/page2".
However in Visual Studio, when they're listed as two different projects, they're on the same level. When I fire up the debugger for the BudgetCalculator app, those links aren't going to point back to the main website, like they should.
Is there a way around this?
One solution would be to stop using the built-in .NET Web Server.
Use IIS, create one site, and make your Web App a Virtual Directory inside of the Web Site.
A project cannot host/contain another project in Visual Studio.
You can however create a project that sites in the directory of another higher level project when you create it, however they may not be directly linked, so you couldn't debug them both at the same time.