VB 6 Books
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Hands On SQL 7 with VB6
Published 22 years ago
by Wayne S. Freeze, Unknown
This is a SQL Server tutorial aimed at improving decision making and simplifying business processes with Microsoft's SQL Server 7 and Visual Basic 6. It includes comprehensive coverage of VB6 in bu...
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Moving to ASP.NET: Web Development with VB .NET
Published 18 years ago includes sample chapter
by Steve Harris, Rob MacDonald, Apress
Moving to ASP.NET: Web Development with VB .NET provides focused and thorough guidance on creating Web applications using ASP.NET, including both Web Form applications and Web Services. Authors Steve Harris and Rob Macdonald have worked extensively with .NET throughout the Beta program, and offer their real-world experience creating and implementing ASP.NET applications. The authors discuss and examine relevant topics, and teach you how to make immediate use of ASP.NET.
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Pure ASP.NET
Published 19 years ago
by Robert Lair, Jason Lefebvre, Sams Publishing
Pure ASP.NET is a premium reference for Active Server Pages development in the new Microsoft .NET Framework
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Comprehensive VB .NET Debugging
Published 17 years ago includes sample chapter
by Mark Pearce, Apress
Visual Studio .NET and, more specifically, Visual Basic .NET give developers more productivity and more power to develop applications, but at the cost of a complex development environment and with a whole new set of potential bugs. Comprehensive VB .NET Debugging analyzes the new defect types that arise with VB .NET and investigates the debugging of every type of VB .NET application together with many common debugging scenarios. Author Mark Pearce shows you how to use the powerful new
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A Preview of Active Server Pages+
Published 20 years ago
by Alex Homer, David Sussman, Richard Anderson, Robert Howard, Wrox
Microsoft's new Active Server Pages+ (ASP+) standard promises a lot more for Web developers who work on the Windows platform. <I>A Preview of Active Server Pages+</I> surveys the new features and APIs that you'll need to know to develop effectively with ASP+. Stressing practical e-commerce examples, this book will be a welcome resource to anyone who programs in ASP already and wants a look at what's next from Microsoft.<p> This text gives you an excellent comparison of the old ASP with the
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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.
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Advanced Visual Basic 5 Techniques
Published 23 years ago
by Rod Stephens, Unknown
Essential skills for the Visual Basic programmer to create high-powered business applications. This book shows professional Visual Basic programmers how to master high-level techniques for developi...
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C++ for VB Programmers
Published 20 years ago includes sample chapter
by Jonathan Morrison, Apress
Knowing how and when to work in C++ is the key to building better, more efficient Windows applications. This book teaches you how to use C++ to enhance your VB applications&emdash;without rewriting them from the ground up. In this book, you will learn to write DLLs that use the performance and capabilities of C++, which provide access to APIs not easily supported by VB.
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Professional Outlook 2000 Programming : With VBA, Office and CDO
Published 21 years ago
by Ken Slovak, Chris Burnham, Wrox
Professional Outlook 2000 Programming shows how to hook into the object model using VB or VBA. Once the basics are covered, more advanced topics are introduced, such as automation, data-access and
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Pocket PC Database Development with eMbedded Visual Basic
Published 19 years ago includes sample chapter
by Rob Tiffany, Apress
The Pocket PC is now the fastest growing platform for building handheld-based enterprise applications. Free from the memory limitations and underpowered processors of other handheld platforms, Pocket Access and eMbedded Visual Basic are providing the Pocket PC with the same one-two punch that Microsoft Access and Visual Basic gave Windows application development in the early 1990s.