I would ask my old engineering mentor if it is ok to bring all my books to the job. His answer: "All engineers do research!" Thank god for the Nutshell books. This series [Nutshell] is not for language learners, although I still learn new things from these books. Like most object-oriented languages,
C Sharp In A Nutshell
- Publisher
- Oreily
- Year
- 2002
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 926
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
I bought this book because my prior experience with other nutshell handbooks but this one must be the worst among them. A lot of information have been left out and I usually can't find what I am looking for.
Designed as a primary reference to be used daily, C# in a Nutshell also includes the essential background information to become productive quickly. Not a "how-to" book or a rehash of Microsoft's documentation, this book goes to the source of the language and APIs to present the content in a way t
To-the-point, authoritative, no-nonsense solutions have always been a trademark of O'Reilly books. The In a Nutshell books have earned a solid reputation in the field as the well-thumbed references that sit beside the knowledgeable developer's keyboard. "C++ in a Nutshell" lives up to the In a Nutsh