Are there any benefits to removing unused script files in a web site/project?
VS Web sites/projects come loaded with several .js files, most of which I don’t use (e.g., I use a CDN for newer versions of jQuery and jQuery-UI). I know it’s safe to remove these unneeded .js files from my projects, but is there any benefit from doing so? Are they deployed to the web server if left alone?
Are there any benefits to removing unused script files in a web site/project?
VS Web sites/projects come loaded with several .js files, most of which I don’t use (e.g., I use a CDN for newer versions of jQuery and jQuery-UI). I know it’s safe to remove these unneeded .js files from my projects, but is there any benefit from doing so? Are they deployed to the web server if left alone?
Are there any benefits to removing unused script files in a web site/project?
VS Web sites/projects come loaded with several .js files, most of which I don’t use (e.g., I use a CDN for newer versions of jQuery and jQuery-UI). I know it’s safe to remove these unneeded .js files from my projects, but is there any benefit from doing so? Are they deployed to the web server if left alone?
Does the VS version setting in Settings.settings matter?
Looking through the server vs local code on a humongous legacy project, I see this in Settings.settings:
Does the VS version setting in Settings.settings matter?
Looking through the server vs local code on a humongous legacy project, I see this in Settings.settings:
Does the VS version setting in Settings.settings matter?
Looking through the server vs local code on a humongous legacy project, I see this in Settings.settings:
Does the VS version setting in Settings.settings matter?
Looking through the server vs local code on a humongous legacy project, I see this in Settings.settings:
What are good reasons to drop Windows XP support? [closed]
Closed 11 years ago.
What are good reasons to drop Windows XP support? [closed]
Closed 11 years ago.
What are good reasons to drop Windows XP support? [closed]
Closed 11 years ago.