Pro .NET 2.0 Windows Forms and Custom Controls in C#
โ Scribed by Matthew MacDonald
- Publisher
- Apress
- Year
- 2005
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 1081
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Renowned author Matthew MacDonald combines careful treatment of the API with detailed user-interface design principles. Further, this book incorporates C# and the final beta of .NET 2.0. The result: thorough coverage of Windows Forms and GDI+ namespaces for .NET programmers! You will become equipped to design state-of-the-art Windows interfaces and program graphics, and learn how to create your own controls.
As a developer, you must know more than just how to add a control to a window. You must be able to create an entire user interface framework thats scalable, flexible, and reusable. This book is not a reference manual. Instead, it contains detailed discussions about user interface elements that youโll use on a regular basis.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
<p><p>Renowned author <strong>Matthew MacDonald</strong> combines careful treatment of the API with detailed user-interface design principles. Further, this book incorporates C# and the final beta of .NET 2.0. The result: thorough coverage of Windows Forms and GDI+ namespaces for .NET programmers! Y
Pro .NET 2.0 Windows Forms and Custom Controls in VB 2005 is the VB 2005 version of the author's best-selling and highly-reviewed Pro .NET 2.0 Windows Forms and Custom Controls in C#. Renowned author Matthew MacDonald shows you VB 2005 programmers how to design flexible, user-friendly Windows interf
The intent of this book is to teach .NET developers the skills necessary to create their own leading edge custom controls. The art of creating custom controls has never been truly explored in detail, often the examples provided are trivial and do not begin to explore the requirements need for a comm
<p><p><i>User Interfaces in VB. NET: Windows Forms and Custom Controls</i> goes beyond simple coverage of the Windows Forms and GDI+ namespaces by combining a careful treatment of the API with a detailed discussion of good user-interface design principles. After reading <i>User Interfaces in VB. NET