George, I'm not using Unidata at the moment but I know you have a number of options available.
1) For cheap and easy access you can use UniObjects through Com Interop. 2) If you want to get a little more fancy you can wrap specific functions written with UniObjects in Web Services, then call those services from pure .NET C# code on your own system. For more commercial development: 3) You can use the Pick Data Provider .NET from Raining Data. 4) You can use RedBack to create RedBack Business Objects, then access the RBOs through C#. (At the moment I believe this must also be through COM Interop.) 5) Try wrapping web services around the RBO's - this can be done with WebSphere and other tools. Then like #2, invoke your web services with pure .NET code. There are a couple other ways but I hope that's a good start. Tony Nebula R&D (Tech Editor, "C#Builder Kick Start", SAMS Publishing) (Forum Moderator, http://www.csharp-station.com/) >-----Original Message----- >From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] >[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of george r smith >Sent: Monday, January 26, 2004 11:39 AM >To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] >Subject: C#.net connectivity to Unidata > > >Hi all, > >Is anyone connecting to Unidata 6.0 using M$ c# as a gui >front-end. If so what method are you using, just want to set >up a pick box at home and want to use c#. > >thanks > >There are only 10 people in the world who understand binary. >George Smith >[EMAIL PROTECTED] _______________________________________________ u2-users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.oliver.com/mailman/listinfo/u2-users
