Decaying Code

Where code comes to die

About the author

Maxime Rouiller is a passionate .NET technology specialist, working for 7 years in large software development, advocating Agile and TDD. Aware of the latest technological trends, he intervenes as a specialist in the .NET Montréal usergroup and acts regularly as a speaker for Web Form programmers on the MVC platform.

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View Source disabled in Internet Explorer?

Found the fix after scouting the forums.

The main reason is because the caching of SSL pages are disabled and are not on disk. Somehow, IE doesn't allow you to view the source of those pages.

To fix the issue, open the registry and go to the following key:


HKCU\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\InternetSettings\

There should be a REG_DWORD value with the name "DisableCachingOfSSLPages". The value should be set to "0x00000001". Change it to "0x00000000" and restart Internet Explorer.

This should allow you to view the HTML of your SSL pages when working in a secure environment.


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Quick introduction to SOLID

For those who don't know SOLID, it's an acronym of acronym.
SOLID stands for the following:
SRP: Single Responsability Principle
OCP: Open/Closed Principle
LSP: Liskov Substitution Principle
ISP: Interface Segregation Principle
DIP: Dependency Inversion Principle
Bringing those principles together is creditted to Robert C. Martin (AKA Uncle Bob).
You can read about SOLID further on Wikipedia or on Uncle Bob's website.
Please note that I'm also in the process of writing some nice posts on how to apply them to your code.
So stay tuned!

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