WPF TaskDialog Wrapper and Emulator
CodeProject®
A TaskDialog wrapper class with fallback emulator (for XP and earlier)
I love working on software and seeing it come to life, especially if it is something that enriches people's lives in some way. I also realize how corny that sounds!
I've always been a quick learner and no less so with computers. Using them has always seemed to come naturally to me. It didn't surprise my family at all when I chose Computer Science as my major in college.
I've been hooked on all things computers and technology since I was a wee lad. I never cease to find things to learn about them and am always interested by the ever evolving use and landscape of computers.
I enjoy building things, observing the progression from prototype to fully functional, and seeing it used in the wild. I'm not very handy with machinery or crafts, but I see this as my own creative outlet. I'm constantly trying and learning new things and I couldn't be more thrilled when I see the fruits of several weeks' or months' labor magically working. It's like putting together an entire car from spare parts and then seeing it rev up and speed down the highway. Except I don't get that disgusting black stuff permanently under my fingernails.
As much as I like to build it, I also like to see it be useful. What good is a bridge to nowhere? Certainly the journey is part of the enjoyment and the learning important, but given the choice I'd rather go on a journey with learning that ends in a useful something to someone. Then it is a win-win.
My goal is ultimately to in some small (or big!) way improve mankind as a species — whether through knowledge or productivity. Or both!
c# wpf css entity-framework sql-server
mainframe ca-datacom cobol
Arkansas Highway & Transportation Department
2007 - Current
During my years I went from being an intern doing minor system modifications to a full-time developer on brand new projects. These projects ranged from a couple Windows Forms apps to several ASP.NET web applications (often very complex AJAX-y ones). I went from being a developer to lead developer and eventually coordinating several projects at once, including those I was actively developing on and others I was overseeing college interns or junior devs work on.
I had to respond to maintenance requests and problems in existing applications, both those I developed and those I had never seen prior, as well as writing up specs and doing several months of design if it was a brand new system. Design spanned the overall system purpose down to things like the database schema and UI mockups.
I've worked on simple data front-end systems, systems that dealt with money and sales, and on up to systems that dealt with court-sensitive information for state police. I've also done systems that were collaborative and real-time, such as one used by several folks 24-7 to handle radio traffic. More recently I've worked on seamless offline synchronization for several hundred travel-heavy on-the-road users throughout the state.
I've consistently shown my value by being willing to embrace new stuff all the time — whether it is helping spur usage of Reporting Services in the beginning or just figuring out server permissions and delegation of Windows credentials for use with a .NET application — as well as to hop from project to project as needed should situations come up. This attitude has had me spear-heading new development on newer technologies for our department, such as researching and implementing a claims-based security solution for all newer projects.
University of Central Arkansas
2003 - 2007
A TaskDialog wrapper class with fallback emulator (for XP and earlier).
May 2011 - Current; followed by 3 people; forked 2 times
I wrote the whole thing, but a lot of the Win32 code was taken directly from Hedley Muscraft's WinForms implementation. See my article on CodeProject for more details. It's thankfully been fairly popular, as far as things could be expected to go.
Tracks when the last time you did something.
Apr 2011 - Current; followed by 2 people
I wrote this from scratch to experiment with and showcase MVVM in a semi-realistic application. It uses the same model and view model classes split between a WPF and Windows Phone 7 client front-end.
A port of the Cosmopolitan Theme, originally for Silverlight, into WPF.
Apr 2011 - Current; followed by 13 people; forked 4 times
I took the Cosmopolitan Theme, released for Silverlight as a mostly Metro inspired theme, and dropped it into a WPF project, rewriting the styles as necessary to work in WPF.
CodeProject®
A TaskDialog wrapper class with fallback emulator (for XP and earlier)
yadyn
A common feature of Windows applications for many years has been the useful little “don’t she me this again”-style check boxes that may appear in a dialog box.
yadyn
It may sound odd to say that being a .NET developer and learning C# has taught me a lot about how societies and civilizations work, but it has.
Alan Cooper
The screenshots and software used as examples are all ancient by today's standards, but the principles and points made are still quite relevant. This is the quintessential GUI handbook.
Elisabeth Freeman, Eric Freeman, Bert Bates, Kathy Sierra
Love learning patterns and I wish-wish-wish they had made this a full-blown class during school. Shame that all of the junior devs and college interns we get know zero about this stuff...
Steve McConnell
Also fairly dated now, but the insights and suggestions are still very applicable in many cases. It's such a no-BS approach to eradicating all of the well-meaning-but-stupid things developers do. The word "practical" in the sub-title is quite appropriate.
Dan Pilone, Russ Miles
Felt like common sense after reading it. But it's still so hard to motivate everyone else to actually do this stuff. Oh well.
Amy Brown
Something I love but rarely get are good examples of what other (successful?) devs have done. How they structured things and overcame problems... a practical approach, if you will. Too often all you get are hello world as architecture examples. Nobody has anything substantial, generally, to show you if you're faced with an actual real-world project to design.
A shiny Pentium 120MHz desktop PC with 4MB of EDO RAM and Win95.
Visual Studio, definitely. Eclipse is okay. Used JBuilder and InterDev in the past.
Due to the nature of my work being internal-facing intranet applications and the like, nothing is visible to the public.
However, I do plan to upload screenshots and discuss them in more detail eventually on my blog.
I try to be optimistic in life and I've always had a keen interest in technology. I still remember playing my first Atari game and NES game and when we first got the internet (you know, back when Excite and Yahoo were bitter rivals). I remember when we'd come home from school and email each other because we thought we it was so awesome. Plus I just liked saying MIME-type.
Since then I've become the go-to guy for tech support in the family and the shoe-in for a Computer Science (which, I eventually did do) career. Predictable? Maybe.
On the whole I try to respect life, opinions, and above all people. I'm very supportive of the individual and I'm not afraid to engage in lengthy debate about a variety of topics or to acknowledge when I haven't a clue. I try to educate myself constantly, and Wikipedia (hell, the internet!) has been an enormous boon to this.
I'm nontheistic and libertarian, which means I don't really think gods mean much to my life and yet I'm very passionate about protecting others rights to practice whatever kooky religion they can think of. But I'm still profoundly interested in biblical criticism as well as philosophy and religion as a whole. I took a class in anthropology in college and ever since I've said that if I wasn't more passionate about programming and a meaningful career, I'd go back and major in anthropology (and linguistics, too).
I'm also an avid video game nerd and have been since I was six. If you ask my family, I "waste" a lot of time playing games.
I tend to be rather low-key and a very easy person to get along with, and I've never had trouble fitting in casually with peers. I'm not legally married yet but my girlfriend and I have been de facto just that for several years now (weddings are expensive!) and I'm very happy with how far I've gotten in life thus far.