Telerik blogs
  • Mobile

    How to Create a Custom Icenium Project Template in Visual Studio

    In this post Jim Cowart explains how you can create a custom project template to be used with the Icenium Extension for Visual Studio.
    October 08, 2013
  • Mobile

    Creating Your First Hybrid Mobile App With Visual Studio Part 2

    In part 1, we looked at how to create the visual portion of a mobile application using Kendo UI Mobile. Today we will examine how to tie the application to a database using simple web services.
    October 08, 2013
  • Productivity

    New Solutions for Scheduling Issues and More

    This week there are several new solutions for scheduling issues in Test Studio 2013 R1, as well as some tweaks to old docs that may help you out. The new scheduling architecture is simpler and more reliable than ever before, but you can still run into some complications. In some scenarios—for example, if you delete a test project on disk before removing the scheduled test runs in the Results view—you might have scheduled test runs that you can't remove or edit. If you run into this issue, you can remove the scheduled test run on disk. Also, if you ...
    October 08, 2013
  • Productivity

    Cleaning Up Nested Callbacks With Promises

    JavaScript has a love-hate relationship with asynchronous code. The language loves to let you make asynchronous calls and developers start to hate JavaScript because its easy to create a giant mess. There are a lot of great patterns for handling asynchronous callbacks, of course. But it’s tempting to just hack some nested callbacks in place and end up with a giant monolithic sideways Christmas tree of doom doing that.
    October 08, 2013
  • Productivity Testing

    30 Days of TDD – Day 12 – Working with Stubs

    “Mocking” is one of those magical concepts derived from OOP that makes TDD possible. But as you saw in the last post, there are many different kind of mocks and each has its own strengths, weaknesses and purposes. We’ll discuss most of these types of mocks at some point in this series. But in this post I’m going to demonstrate one of the most common type of mocks you’ll use; the Stub.
    October 07, 2013
  • Mobile

    How to Create a Custom Icenium Project Template in Visual Studio

    In this post Jim Cowart explains how you can create a custom project template to be used with the Icenium Extension for Visual Studio.
    October 08, 2013
  • Mobile

    Creating Your First Hybrid Mobile App With Visual Studio Part 2

    In part 1, we looked at how to create the visual portion of a mobile application using Kendo UI Mobile. Today we will examine how to tie the application to a database using simple web services.
    October 08, 2013
  • Productivity

    New Solutions for Scheduling Issues and More

    This week there are several new solutions for scheduling issues in Test Studio 2013 R1, as well as some tweaks to old docs that may help you out. The new scheduling architecture is simpler and more reliable than ever before, but you can still run into some complications. In some scenarios—for example, if you delete a test project on disk before removing the scheduled test runs in the Results view—you might have scheduled test runs that you can't remove or edit. If you run into this issue, you can remove the scheduled test run on disk. Also, if you ...
    October 08, 2013
  • Productivity

    Cleaning Up Nested Callbacks With Promises

    JavaScript has a love-hate relationship with asynchronous code. The language loves to let you make asynchronous calls and developers start to hate JavaScript because its easy to create a giant mess. There are a lot of great patterns for handling asynchronous callbacks, of course. But it’s tempting to just hack some nested callbacks in place and end up with a giant monolithic sideways Christmas tree of doom doing that.
    October 08, 2013
  • Productivity Testing

    30 Days of TDD – Day 12 – Working with Stubs

    “Mocking” is one of those magical concepts derived from OOP that makes TDD possible. But as you saw in the last post, there are many different kind of mocks and each has its own strengths, weaknesses and purposes. We’ll discuss most of these types of mocks at some point in this series. But in this post I’m going to demonstrate one of the most common type of mocks you’ll use; the Stub.
    October 07, 2013