Beginning C# 2008: From Novice to Professional (Books for Professionals by Professionals)
Author | : | |
Rating | : | 4.21 (981 Votes) |
Asin | : | 1430210338 |
Format Type | : | paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 550 Pages |
Publish Date | : | 2016-02-06 |
Language | : | English |
DESCRIPTION:
He has consulted for Microsoft on DNA solutions, and he has held consulting positions with Daimler Benz, Microsoft, NatWest, and other major corporations. Gross was a contributor to Professional Active Server Pages, Professional SQL Server 6.5 Administration, Professional NT Internet Information Server Administration, and Programming Microsoft Windows 2000 Unleashed. . He is the author of A Programmer's Introduction to Windows DNA. About the Author Christian Gross is a consultant with vast experience in the client/server world
The most confusing C# book ever! I will have to agree with the majority of the reviews that this is not a very good book. I have read a couple of other books on C# that I learned a lot from. I am trying to get my hands on as much C# material as I can; I get a little something more out of each book. Now, when I started reading this book (before I read any of these reviews), I began thinking that if I didn't have any previous knowledge of C#, I would really have no idea what this guy was talking about! There is no way that this book is for beginners! It is very, very confusing. I. "Stupid book I have ever seen" according to Abudureyimu Abulimiti. After reading some parts, especially the part about inheritance and polymorphism, I have to say that this book is not for beginners, even not for advanced developers. This book leads people to wrong way to design. For example, The Shape, Rectangle and Square relationship is discussed in very complex and abstract way that the readers can't understand even if they read that portion 10 times. The author tried to explain the "good" way of component level development using that example and spend a long time on comparing different approaches. While su. "Virtually Unreadable" according to Nicholas W. Reich. I wanted to learn C#, so I went to a bookstore and this was the only beginning C# book they had, so I bought it. Complete mistake. I found this book to be very difficult to follow and often poorly thought out. I struggled my way through the first two chapters and felt that I had missed a whole lot of really key information. Reading and rereading whole sections failed to help me really understand what the author was getting at. Further, his analogies were generally hard to follow. They were often long and drawn out, but forgot to explicitly tie t
He has consulted for Microsoft on DNA solutions, and he has held consulting positions with Daimler Benz, Microsoft, NatWest, and other major corporations. Christian Gross is a consultant with vast experience in the client/server world. He is the author of A Programmer's Introduction to Windows DNA. Gross was a contributor to Professional Active Server Pages, Professional SQL Server 6.5 Administration, Professional NT Internet Information Server Administration, and Programming Microsoft Windows
From the earliest chapters and the first introductory concepts, you'll be looking at real–world programming challenges and learning how C# can be used to overcome them. If you want to really get the best from a programming language, you need to know which features work best in which situations, and understand their strengths and weaknesses. By the time you've finished reading this book and worked through the sample exercises, you'll be a confident and very competent C# programmer. Writing good code can be a challengethere are so many options, especially in a .NET language like C#. As you progress through the book, the problems become more involved and interesting, while the solutions become correspondingly more complex and powerful as C# features interact to achieve the results that you want.This second edition has been revised and improved to now include the SQL Server 2008 release and explain how you can integrate SQL Server 2008 with your C# applications. This book is for anyone who wants to write good C# codeeven if you have never programmed before. You will still have many explorations of the .NET Framewo