Professional Visual Studio 2008 (Wrox Programmer to Programmer)

Professional Visual Studio 2008 (Wrox Programmer to Programmer)
Authors
Nick Randolph, David Gardner
ISBN
0470229888
Published
28 Jul 2008
Purchase online
amazon.com

Professional Visual Studio 2008 Microsoft Visual Studio 2008 is the latest version in the ongoing evolution of the Integrated Development Environment (IDE), and this resource examines the diverse facets of the IDE—from common tasks to intricate functions to the powerful tools that accompany the main code editing and design windows.

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  1. Editorial Reviews
  2. Customer Reviews

Customer Reviews

Corey Brand said
This is very good overview of VS2008 and the features it offers to developers. As a developer myself, I sometimes focus more on the features of a particular programming language and neglect the features offered by the IDE I'm using. This is a very good book to bring balance to a MS developer's skill set.

Nicholas Perez said
The authors of this book clearly love Visual Basic. I don't. I can relate VB concepts to C# and others, but I wish I didn't have to.

If you hate VB as much as I do, definitely stay away. The book will teach you a lot about Visual Studio, but it will also make you roll your eyes and deeply sigh as you realize that you're about to read 1000 pages of Visual Basic bias (And by bias, I mean sometimes there are C# examples, but VB is seemingly what the authors prefer throughout most of the book).

Rename it to "Visual Studio 2008 For People Who Don't Hate VB.NET" and I'll easily give it four or five stars.

Bassam Muhammad said
I found this book to be really amazing , authors did great job to explore all difficult to find details in VS2008 , I'm a professional experienced programmer but still , I found many many things I did not know that I can do with [...] by reading this book, I think Microsoft should buy it and give it for free with each copy of [...] 2008 sold, it is an indispensable material and will make you really productive with the IDE. Highly recommended.

Mitchell Wheat said
Let me start with a disclaimer: I know Nick Randolph and Dave Gardner personally through my involvement with the Perth .NET user group. They are both very talented and skilled developers and active in their support of the developer community. I tried not to let this fact bias this short review too much!

I reviewed the Visual Studio 2005 predecessor of this book some time ago, and I think the new 2008 is an improvement. It's a big book and not just by its size. It covers a huge amount of material and could probably have been subtitled `everything you wanted to know about Visual Studio 2008 but were afraid to ask'! The Visual Studio 2008 Integrated Development Environment (IDE) is a complex beast, and worth getting to know well, if like me, you spend most of your working life in it! You could, of course, still do most of your development in Notepad, but you could also wear a hair shirt...

The primary focus of this book is on the IDE itself, rather than the specific languages that can be used within .NET or indeed the .NET Framework itself. I'm not going to give a chapter by chapter account of what is contained in this book, mainly because it would take a loooooong time, but also because I fear my head might explode! Seriously though, I have read around 75% of it. The writing style is clear and I doubt whether you could make any book about Visual Studio more engaging than they have achieved.

The authors' goals, as stated, were not just updating the Visual Studio 2005 version of this book or simply to explain how to use Visual Studio, but also to create a set of productivity best practices and recommendations on how to use Visual Studio features in an effective way. I think they have achieved that goal.

One of the first Amazon reviews was not favourable, but that reviewer was looking for a book that would teach C# and an introduction to the .NET framework. As Dave mentioned in his response to that reviewer, although both authors do have a bias towards Visual Basic, approximately 40% of the code samples are written in C#. There is also a chapter that provides coverage of F# (http://mitch-wheat.blogspot.com/2008/09/new-net-f-ctp-release.html)

It is probably not the sort of book you would read cover to cover, but rather delve into specific chapters to gain insight into particular features. It's great for quickly finding out what features are available. The first day it was on my desk at work, I used it to quickly find a debugging gem that might have otherwise remained undiscovered.
Kudos goes to Nick and Dave for producing a great resource for developers.

There is a companion website and blog here: http://www.professionalvisualstudio.com/

Scott LaFollette said
If you're a Visual Basic programmer, which I am not, then you might get a lot out of this book. I was hoping that the authors would provide examples in both Visual Basic and C#, but unfortunately that was not the case. There are a few examples that use C# but not nearly enough to even come close to enabling me to understand the Visual Studio framework and .NET development environment.

Perhaps this is an excellent book, but for me it was a major disappointment.

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