I have 2 bookshelves of bargain .net books. This is by far the worst on the whole collection. I was expecting a book on component building. What I got was a walkthrough of building a clunky enterprise application. For component building, I reccommend the Apress! Class design Handbook as a start
Building applications and components with Visual Basic .NET
โ Scribed by Ted Pattison, Joe Hummel
- Publisher
- Addison-Wesley Professional
- Year
- 2003
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 592
- Series
- Microsoft .NET development series
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Building Applications and Components with Visual Basic .NET is the Visual Basic developer's guide to the .NET framework and object-oriented programming. The authors introduce the basic architecture of the .NET Framework and explore Visual Basic .NET's new OOP features, the syntax required to use them, and the effect that syntax has on code behavior. Readers gain skills essential to creating well-designed applications and component libraries for the .NET Framework.
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This book gave me a good understanding of the methodology of ASP.NET as well as the concepts behind it. The organization of the book is good for someone new to ASP.NET and C# as it starts simple and proceeds forward in a logical manner to more complex topics. However, I agree with a previous revie
John Alexander and bestselling author Billy Hollis show programmers how to develop enterprise-level Web applications using Microsoft's popular programming language โ Visual Basic.NET.* Features the incomparable insights and programming know-how of two popular Microsoft insiders, arming developers wi
John Alexander and bestselling author Billy Hollis show programmers how to develop enterprise-level Web applications using Microsoft's popular programming language--Visual Basic.NET. * Features the incomparable insights and programming know-how of two popular Microsoft insiders, arming developer