VB.NET Books
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The .NET Languages: A Quick Translation Guide
Published 19 years ago includes sample chapter
by Brian Bischof, Apress
For Visual Basic and C# programmers facing Microsoft's new platform, The .NET Languages: A Quick Translation Guide offers an extremely useful comparison of three languages: Visual Basic 6, Visual Basic .NET, and C#. With nearly indispensable code snippets that show central language features at work, this book offers an excellent resource for getting up to speed with .NET in record time.The just-the-facts approach in this text is its best feature.
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Programming VB .NET: A Guide for Experienced Programmers
Published 19 years ago includes sample chapter
by Gary Cornell, Jonathan Morrison, Apress
This is the book that you want to read if you have knocked around VB 6 for a couple of years and you've decided to move up to .NET. ... For the target audience, technical books don't get much better than this. — Dan Mabbutt, Visual Basic Guide on About.com In Programming VB .NET: A Guide for Experienced Programmers, authors Gary Cornell and Jonathan Morrison carefully explain the exciting new features of Visual Basic .NET. Since VB
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Visual Basic and Visual Basic .NET for Scientists and Engineers
Published 19 years ago includes sample chapter
by Christopher M. Frenz, Apress
Visual Basic and Visual Basic .NET for Scientists and Engineers begins with an overview of the Visual Basic and Visual Basic .NET IDEs, their important characteristics, and how the development environments can be manipulated to suit developers' needs. After a solid discussion of VB and VB .NET forms, controls, and namespaces, author Christopher Frenz shows you how to put controls to work by making use of the different control events.
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Beginning Object-Oriented Programming with VB 2005: From Novice to Professional
Published 15 years ago includes sample chapter
by Daniel R. Clark, Apress
Beginning Object-Oriented Programming with Visual Basic .NET 2.0 is a comprehensive resource of correct coding procedures. Author Dan Clark takes you through all the stages of a programming project, including analysis, modeling, and development, all using object-oriented programming techniques and VB .NET. Clark explores the structure of classes and their hierarchies, as well as inheritance and interfaces. He also introduces the