I started using Sandcastle some time ago to generate a Documentation Website for one of our projects. It's working quite well but we've always only written documentation for classes, methods, properties (...) in our project and had completely separate documentation for the overall project and project parts/modules/namespaces. It would be nice if I could merge that documentation together and add respective documentation to the generated helper files but I can't figure out how to do it.

Definition of project summary and namespace summary comments that will appear in the help file. You can also easily indicate which namespaces to include or exclude from the help file. Support is also included for specifying namespace comments via a NamespaceDoc class within each namespace.


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Note the "Global." prepended to namespace to be documented. At least for my VB project configuration, this was necessary so that the name of the namespace is not nested inside the root namespace, but is the name of the root namespace. Before I prepended the "Global.", the compiler was generating a summary for "TestNamespace.TestNamespace", rather than just "TestNamespace". Given that incorrect info in the compiler generated XML file, SandCastle was not recognizing the summary as belonging to the correct namespace.

I read @Frank-Rem answer to Numid's question How to generate documentation using Sandcastle NuGet package (EWSoftware.SHFB)? and tried to add a new project to my solution. However, when I try to add a Sandcastle Documentation project I do not have the Documentation project type as an option.

I uninstalled the NuGet package and reinstalled it, thinking it may have been a buggy install. But the documentation project type is still not an option, even after shutting Visual Studio down and relaunching it.

Where sandboxes set limits and boundaries, sandcastles provide an opportunity to create something new from the limitless bounds of your imagination. Project Sandcastle is about building something new on the silicon of your hardware.

This time around, Project Sandcastle lets you boot Android 10 on the Apple iPhone 7, iPhone 7 Plus and the iPod Touch. The project makes extensive use of the checkra1n jailbreak to launch, the same one that you use to jailbreak your iPhone via a rooted Android. Work is on to expand the project to the other iPhones included in the checkra1n jailbreak, but for now, you are restricted to just these three devices. The silver lining is that the vulnerabilities that have been used to make the checkra1n jailbreak, and consequently Project Sandcastle, possible are extremely unlikely to be fixed. So the methods will theoretically work in perpetuity on the entire range of vulnerable iPhones, removing the "what's the point? Apple will fix it with an update" dissuasion from the efforts.

You might recall, many years ago, that a Linux and Android on iPhone port was in the works for the original iPhone. This project is being brought to you by David Wang and Chris Wade, the same people who did that original port. Wang and Wade are the co-founders of Corellium, a company that is currently being sued by Apple for selling access to virtual machines that run iOS. The two say Corellium's iPhone VM and debugging helped the project get up and running quickly.

You might have seen the news earlier today that you can jailbreak an iPhone with an Android phone, but that's just the start. "Project Sandcastle" builds on years of development to promise even more: running Android itself on an iPhone. For now, the project is in "beta" (more like pre-pre-alpha, given the current limitations), and just a single Apple device is compatible, but it's a start.

Sandcastle is Microsoft's answer to JavaDoc. Though in active use at Microsoft for several years, it is still a very rough project and appears to be no where near ready for general deployment. Prior to the release of .NET 2.0 and the announcement of Sandcastle the standard tool was the much more mature NDoc. Unfortunately NDoc is no longer being maintained.

The most recent dispute over Sandcastle is its non-open status. Officially all projects on CodePlex are supposed to adhere to an open source license, preferably approved by the OSI. In reality it has become a dumping ground for stuff that would have been placed in the now defunct GotDotNet site.

Due to popular outcry against having a non-open source project on the site, Microsoft has pulled Sandcastle from CodePlex. According to Anand, Microsoft is considering either moving the project to MSDN Code gallery or republishing the project with the source code. In the mean time you can download the May CTP from Paulo Santos' mirror.

The team behind Project Sandcastle are not new to this sort of thing, as around a decade ago, the cofounders of the project were behind the original port of Android to an iPhone. The iDroid project got a lot of press at the time when the entire smartphone and mobile landscape was very different.

Join Code+ and other +Programs -- Data+, Climate+, CS+, and Applied Ethics+ -- at the +Programs Info Fair on Thursday, January 18 from 1 - 3pm in the Gross Hall Energy Hub. Program administrators will be on hand to answer all your questions, and you can review the projects that have been selected for summer 2024.

In addition to my project being fascinating, Code+ taught me valuable teamwork and technical skills. I learned how to work with a team on a long-term technical project, improving my communication and collaboration skills and seeing firsthand how team members with different roles need to interact to form an effective team.

Furthermore, my coding and general technical skills improved throughout the course of the ten weeks, and I feel prepared to continue pursuing my computer science degree and to work in technical roles. In fact, I recently landed an internship for the summer of 2022. I will be working as a backend software engineer for the U.S. Federal Government, and my Code+ experience was vital in helping me to secure this job. During interviews, I was able to discuss the details of my Code+ project, and I have used the skills I learned during the program to help me succeed in technical assessments.

From what we can gather, this update brings support for an ongoing project dubbed Project Sandcastle by Corellium, the same firm that is currently involved in an ongoing lawsuit with Apple for its indirect involvement in the development of jailbreak tools like unc0ver and so forth. As it would seem, Project Sandcastle makes it possible to run the Android operating system natively on an iPhone 7 or 7 Plus, with support for other iPhones coming later.

Having Android on an iPhone is not something that is really new. A decade ago, Corellium cofounders got it on the original iPhone. In the last hours, they have published Project Sandcastle, a project in which they manage to achieve the impossible: Android 10 on a modern iPhone.

Now should you take an old iPhone and install Android? Well, it is not something that we recommend. There are very competent Android mobiles that will offer you a much better experience. If you already have an old iPhone that you do not want and you feel like experimenting (knowing the risks of these modifications), then you can visit the project website.

Apple restricts iPhone users to operate inside a sandbox, but users own that hardware, and they should be able to use that hardware the way they want. So where sandboxes create limits and boundaries on the hardware that users own, sandcastles provide an opportunity to create something new and wonderful from the limitless bounds of your imagination."

The project website will contain tutorials and guides for walking scholars through the multiple-application process of annotating and converting images into 3D scenes. The project site also aims to host case studies that can demonstrate how the Sandcastle workflow leads to new knowledge about the use of hierarchical scale, perspectival flexibility, and cartographic decision-making in chorographic views from the medieval and early modern periods. The Book of Fortresses project is also closely aligned with this project, and will serve as one of the most significant sources to test the application of the Sandcastle workflow.

Hey nice project, like the lights and mood. But there is no transition between the buildings and the ground. Something like this =4BTM4YPAeh0&ab_channel=Crompwell . And add some dry grass near the walls.

Krzysiek

Not needed. It might be a few months before I can get to the Buffalo. My side project is to finish up the rover parts for the Bison, but even that is slow. The mothership has a lot of IVAs and they take up a huge amount of time. So if you need aquatic parts soon, you are better off looking at another mod or make your own.

No, don't need them anytime soon, but thought it could be fun to play with. For now, I am using one of the small stock .625 lander fuel tank for the ballast tank. Once I get familiar enough with Gimp, I want to make an actual part for it which will be able to stick to the undercarriage of the Buffalo. I've got an idea of how I want it to look, so now the hard part is making it work. Right now, though, I am revising Nohochacyum. I want to get this star project finished before I dive into another project...

FBI Analyzes Data in the Cloud to Deliver on its Mission: The FBI is using AWS to gather and analyze intelligence for mission workloads for their project, Sandcastle. When dealing with massive amounts of data, speed is critical. Analysts need to be able to parse, package, and derive conclusions as quickly as possible. The AWS Cloud helps the FBI search across multiple databases simultaneously, analyze this data, and provide information in a useable format that allows agents to act and deliver on their missions at a pace previously not possible. e24fc04721

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