Tim,
The next thing to check is the project type. Usually if you
right-click the project and choose properties, you'll receive a dialog on
the screen with a good number of vertically laid out tabs (mine has 9,
beginning with Application and ending with Code analysis). The Web Site
project is usually a shorter list and not setup as tabs if I remember
correcltly. The big difference is the creation process. Even with SP1 you
can still create the old web site project. To create the Web Site project
you would use File | New | Web Site. If you used this method to create the
project then that would mean it's this problematic web site project template
that shipped with the initial launch of VS 2005. If you used the File | New
| Project, and selected the ASP.Net Web Application project type then you're
using the new version that compiles into one dll. One way to check is to see
if you have a ton of strangely named dll files, usually made up of the page
name plus a bunch of numeric text. If so then you're using the web site
project and not the asp.net web application. I believe there is a conversion
process to make it easier, but I don't remember since as soon as the add-on
was available pre-sp1 I started from scratch with the new application
project type.
--
Hope this helps,
Mark Fitzpatrick
Former Microsoft FrontPage MVP 199?-2006
"Timbo" <> wrote in message
news:...
> Hi Mark,
>
> Thank you for your reply, When looking as the version of VS2005 is says
> 8.0.50727.762 (SP.050727-7600).
>
> I took a look on the Microsoft download site and VS2005 SP1 also says
> version 50727.762 so I guess I already have it.
>
> Am I correct? If so any other ideas?
>
> Kind Regards
>
> Tim
>
>
>
> "Mark Fitzpatrick" <> wrote in message
> news:...
>> Are you using the web site project that comes with the pre-SP1 version fo
>> VS 2005? I'm asking because you mention jumping around seems to work
>> after a page is called once. In the web site project, pages are compiled
>> more on the fly than in VS 2003 web projects. That means they don't get
>> pre-compiled. One of the biggest issues that comes about is when you're
>> sharing classes from other directories. Those files don't usually get
>> compiled in the order we would expect. A new project was introduced soon
>> after the launch of VS 2005 called the Web Application Project. This
>> mimics the web project from previous versions of VS and enables you to
>> pre-compile the entire site. I don't know which project type you're
>> using, but it seems to fit this scenario.
>>
>>
>> --
>>
>> Hope this helps,
>> Mark Fitzpatrick
>> Former Microsoft FrontPage MVP 199?-2006
>>
>> "Timbo" <> wrote in message
>> news:...
>>> This is a really weird one and very odd.
>>>
>>> I have written a web site using VS2005 and .Net 2.0, all works very well
>>> when running it locally. However when I publish it to my web server
>>> (hosted by HELM), I get unknown errors when I connect to some of the
>>> aspx pages, however if I keep surfing around my web site the pages
>>> suddenly start working for no apparent reason. Once each page has been
>>> displayed at least once that particular page won't thow an error again,
>>> however on another machine I can have the same problem (although it
>>> appears not to be quite so bad).
>>>
>>> Anyone have any ideas what might be causing this behaviour. Web server
>>> not loading the pages properly until their cached properly? Is there
>>> any code I can use to slow down the loading of the pages - I'm
>>> grabbing at straws here!!
>>>
>>> I have put an friendly error page so at least the user doesn't see the
>>> ugly .NET error
>>>
>>>
>>> Any help / pointers will be greatly appreciated.
>>>
>>> TIA
>>>
>>> Tim
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>
>
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