C# Books
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Microsoft .NET for Visual FoxPro Developers
Published 18 years ago
by Kevin McNeish, Hentzenwerke Publishing
For those simply curious about what .NET offers, this book provides a strong overview of the .NET framework and the C# and Visual Basic .NET languages and helps developers assess these new technologies through the lens of Visual FoxPro. Included are introductions to .NET, Visual Studio .NET, C#, and Visual Basic .NET. For developers who are ready to learn specifics about how to use .NET in their software development projects, it offers information on best practices to help climb the
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C# Design Patterns: A Tutorial
Published 18 years ago
by James W. Cooper, Addison-Wesley Professional
The first book for C# programmers on how to use Design Patterns. Explains how to write C# programs using some of the most common design patterns. Softcover. CD-ROM included.
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User Interfaces in C#: Windows Forms and Custom Controls
Published 18 years ago includes sample chapter
by Matthew MacDonald, Apress
User Interfaces in C#: Windows Forms and Custom Controls goes beyond simply covering the Windows Forms namespaces by combining a careful treatment of the API with a detailed discussion of good user-interface design principles. The combination will show you how to create the next generation of software applications using the .NET Framework.
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Patterns in Java: A Catalog of Reusable Design Patterns Illustrated with UML, 2nd Edition, Volume 1
Published 18 years ago
by Mark Grand, Wiley
Software design patterns let developers reuse tried-and-true designs in new projects. For the state of the art in object design, consider Patterns in Java, perhaps the best book that Java developers have at their disposal for getting leading-edge pattern expertise in a convenient and well-organized volume. The guide opens with background on pattern research, including the groundbreaking Design Patterns.
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ASP.NET for Web Designers (Voices That Matter)
Published 18 years ago
by Peter Ladka, New Riders Press
Teaching ASP.NET in a non-linear format that creative thinkers can easily grasp and understand without the typical programming jargon. Provides clear and concise, hands-on, real-world examples right from the beginning of the book. The book contains a natural progression by providing foundational information in the opening chapters.
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Beginning Visual C# (Programmer to Programmer)
Published 18 years ago
by Karli Watson, David Espinosa, Zach Greenvoss, Jacob Hammer Pedersen, Christian Nagel, Jon D. Reid, Matthew Reynolds, Morgan Skinner, Eric White, Wrox
By using this book with Visual Studio .NET you'll come to understand the fundamentals of the C# language and learn to program the .NET Framework. We'll help you succeed - from your first steps in the language up to the point where you are ready to write real world C# applications.
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Advanced .NET Remoting in VB .NET
Published 18 years ago includes sample chapter
by Ingo Rammer, Apress
Don't expect this book to be an easy, quick read. Do expect it to be the best information on the subject that you can find anywhere. — Dan Mabbutt, Visual Basic Guide on About.com With all the attention paid recently to Web services, many developers don't realize that the true successor to DCOM is actually .NET Remoting. And what an improvement it is! Advanced .NET Remoting in VB .NET is the Visual Basic edition of Ingo Rammer's bestselling Advanced .NET Remoting (C# edition
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.NET Development for Java Programmers
Published 18 years ago includes sample chapter
by Paul Gibbons, Apress
Java developers have adapted to a world in which everything is an object, resources are reclaimed by a garbage collector, and multiple inheritance is replaced by interfaces. All of these things have prepared developers to thrive in Microsoft's new .NET environment using C#. Despite similarities between Java and C#, complex differences still lurk. This book will walk you through both language and library differences, to help you develop enterprise applications requiring mastery.
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GDI+ Programming in C# and VB .NET
Published 18 years ago includes sample chapter
by Nick Symmonds, Apress
GDI+ both wraps arcane API calls and extends them for much easier use. Programmers no longer have to make do with the familiar but simplistic VB 6.0 drawing model, nor do they have to dig down into the GDI API in order to get any real work done. In GDI+, Microsoft has come up with a complete, but still extensible, set of classes for all of the .NET programmer's drawing needs. GDI+ requires different techniques than the Windows GDI API, as it is completely stateless.
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CIL Programming: Under the Hood of .NET
Published 18 years ago includes sample chapter
by Jason Bock, Apress
The Common Intermediate Language (CIL) is the core language of .NET. Although .NET developers often use a high-level language (such as C# or VB .NET) to develop their systems, they can use CIL to do anything allowed by.NET specifications&emdash;which is not the case for C# and VB .NET. Understanding how CIL works will provide you with a deep, language-independent insight into the core parts of .NET. This knowledge is essential for creating dynamic types, a powerful part of the .NET Framework.