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Paperback Programming Microsoft ADO.NET 2.0 Core Reference Book

ISBN: 073562206X

ISBN13: 9780735622067

Programming Microsoft ADO.NET 2.0 Core Reference

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Book Overview

Build your expertise as you move beyond the basics--and delve into the essential topics of programming with ADO.NET 2.0. This comprehensive reference offers expert guidance, hands-on instruction, and... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Needs more emphasis on typed datasets

I was assigned to work on a project using VS 2008 with SQLServer Express. Not knowing anything about ADO.NET but having read other books by this excellent author, I bought this book (actually, I ended up with 2 copies by mistake - however I leave one copy at home). Sceppa covers everything extensively regarding untyped datasets and, being a slow learner, I hard a hard time taking the material he presents and applying it to strongly typed datasets, which in my opinion he covers too scantily. Then I discovered the TypedTableBase(Of xxxRow) class in the VS help files. I printed a copy of this Help topic, and with this in hand, I can easily connect untyped-to-typed datasets. All in all, it's a very useful book. If he ever writes an updated edition, maybe he can save others some time by expanding the typed dataset topic. Better coverage of DataGridViews and bound controls in general would also be helpful.

Awesome book - great detail

This book does a great job at explaining each concept it covers. I started the book with many misconceptions of disconnected data and other ADO.NET items. The book has many great code examples that are kept short and to the point. I definitely recommend this book to my team and anyone else wanting a stronger understanding of how to effectively use ADO.NET. Some of the performance tips it provides will suprise you.

Breath of fresh air

I normally buy Wrox books and up until .NET I was very happy with them, but their .NET books (ASP.NET 2.0 and VB.NET particularly) were poorly organized with massive numbers of errors in them. I wanted an ADO.NET book but the customer reviews of the Wrox title were poor so I kept looking and found this book that has much better reviews. I'd not bought a Microsoft Press book recently because I didn't like the last one I tried so this was an act of faith for me. I have to say, thought, that this book is an order of magnitude better than the recent Wrox books I have bought. I don't know if the single author approach simply results in a better book or if the particular author (David Sceppa) can take the credit. Either way, I think Wrox needs to stop publishing books with multiple authors. The problem with ADO.NET is that everything is intermingled and it's hard to discuss, say, DataSets without mentioning DataTables or DataAdapters. David (or someone) say down and very carefully figured out the sequence to explain stuff with the minimum of forward referencing. This means there are only a few unresolved references I have to hold in my brain at a time for which I am very grateful. On the down-side, this means there is some repetition as he discusses the same class relationship from different perspectives in different chapters. At first I found this annoying until I realized that this was actually making my life as the reader much easier. I have yet to find a single error and the sample code in particalar seems to be error free which is in stark contrast to the Wrox .NET books. The samples themselves are compact and clean and writen in both VB and C# which is a handy way for a VB programmer like me to learn a little C# on the cheap. I certainly never found myself thinking 'The purpose of this sample is to add 10 unncecessary pages to this book' unlike other books *cough*XML Bible*cough*. I'm only about one third of the way through right now but I am very impressed. I really hope someone from Wrox reads this because I'd like the old Wrox back that published great technical books.

Absolutely superb

I am a huge ADO.NET nut and David's first book was absolutely priceless. After his last book, he set a very high bar that was going to be hard to meet, yet that's exactly what he did. Pros: - He discusses every facet of the ADO.NET library and does it well - He doesn't shy away from difficult topics and in particular, goes straight at them in his Advanced Update section - Excellent flow - Won't leave you hanging if you don't know the 1.x framework but doesn't bog itself down in it either. - Stellar writing style. David is interesting and always keeps you wanting to read more. He's concise, to the point yet does both without ever leaving you wanting for more. CONS -Calling this a con is probably a bit unfair but if there's one thing I didn't like was the coverage to TableAdapters. This has nothing to do with Sceppa's coverage and everything to do with the objects themselves. Since I never use them I have a bias against them. With that said, I doubt you could do a Core Reference without covering them so this doesn't really count. The specific areas that this book really does a great job in is Transactions, Advanced Updates and client side data manipulation. Items like the syntax for DataTable.Select are covered in such stellar detail there's probably no situation that you will be unprepared for. Transactions are another complex area and this section alone makes the book worth its price. Advanced updates are a must in any ADO.NET book and history repeated itself here. Pure Gold plain and simple.

Accessing a Database from the .NET Environment

This book is intended for people writing data access code in a Microsoft .NET application. ADO (Active Data Object) .NET is a set of libraries within the Microsoft .NET framework that helps you to communicate with various data sources from .NET applications. The newest version of ADO.NET which comes with Visual Studio 2005 is the first major release that does not introduce a new object model. This implies that the fundamental technology is reaching a point of stability in spite of several problems that users are requesting such as better support for XML. Most of the illustrations in the book use the SQL Server Express Edition which is free, and redistributable. As such, it is helpful if you have at least a bit of knowledge about programming in SQL. The more work you can get done in SQL, the faster your application will run. I would recommend the purchase of an additional book on T-SQL, the specific version of the SQL language used with SQL Server. This book is more concerned with connecting to your database with a program that you might write.
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