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Paperback Visual C# 2005: A Developer's Notebook Book

ISBN: 059600799X

ISBN13: 9780596007997

Visual C# 2005: A Developer's Notebook

In the three years since Microsoft made C# available, there have been lots of tweaks to the language. That's because C# is not only essential for making .NET work, it's a big way for Microsoft to attract millions of Java, C and C++ developers to the platform. And C# has definitely made some inroads. Because of its popularity among developers, the language received standardization from ECMA International, making it possible to port C# applications...

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Customer Reviews

4 ratings

Surprised

I just borrowed this book from the library as I'm trying to cut down and only buy true reference books. I didn't have a whole lot of expectations, but this book was exactly what the doctor ordered. I knew C# for VS.NET 1.1 and am gradually migrating to 2.0 and all of it's extra features. I just wanted a book that covered the new stuff... and could come as close to just injecting the information into my brain without all of the extra fluff. This book does exactly that. If you're new to .NET don't get this book... but if you're looking for an incremental upgrade book (as I was) that is concise, full of examples, and covers the whole spectrum of VS.NET 2.0 then this is IT! That said, the title is just a bit misleading... the first chapter is about the new C# keywords and constructs, but this book covers changes with Forms, ASP.NET (Themes, Master Pages, ...) and so forth. This books has been hard to put down and I'm seriously considering buying this one to add to my reference collection. I've learned a lot from it in just the past 24 hours.

Straight to the point

I was hired for a developer job using VS.NET 2005 and I need something to get me up to speed on all the new things in C#. This book did the trick and was a delight to read. It is not a lengthy book, but, is full of straightforward advice.

Best Delta Book on C# 2.0 Out There

So, You are a seasoned C# 1.x developer very much looking forward to learn the lean mean C# 2.0, great. But as much as you want to learn the language enhancements, you despise the fact that any book you pick seems to start teaching you the old things over and over again; all the features you already knew (or should know); the for loop, the if statement and therefore you'd have to skip several hundred pages to get to learn a new feature...that is painful. Like you, I was looking for a book which will teach me delta, i.e. the differences and enhancements to the new language and not the features which I already know as a C# developer for several years. Written with this upgrade-only concept in mind, seasoned author Jesse Liberty's "Visual C# 2005" came to the rescue. As series creator Bret McLaughlin says "People don't have time (or the income) to read through 600 page books, often learning 200 things of which only about 4 apply to their current job." I found this to be a very true statement. From very begining, this book is targeted towards explaining generics, iterators, anonymous methods, partial types, static classes,, nullable types, limiting access to properties, delegate covariance, contra-variance, enumerators etc; things you'd want to learn as these are new to C# 2.0. Next chapter talks about IDE enhancements (not necessarily a language feature but it helps), visualizers, refactoring and debugging tools provided with Visual studio.NET 2005. It gets better from here; Web apps, data driven forms, asynchronous tasks, one click deployment...you name it. In a little over 200 pages, it is a concise upgrade guide to C# 2.0 and Visual Studio.NET 2005 enhancements to support this update. Developer's notebook also talks about security controls, personalization, authentication, master pages, themes and other ASP.NET enhancements you'd find ubiquitous in all ASP.NET 2.0 books, without the fluff. I made myself sound almost like the marketing person for O'Reilly but the truth is, I found this book really exciting. As Bret further said "the often-frantic scribbling and notes that a true-blue alpha geek mentally makes when working with a new language, API or project. It's the no-nonsense code that solves problems....". See it for yourself; download the source from http://www.libertyassociates.com/pages/Books.htm and check out the code samples and labs. I've also just attended Juval Lowy's workshop on Visual C# 2.0 in DevConnections 2005 conference held in Las Vegas. Along with conference notes handout, I used Developer's Notebook as a follow up reference. Example labs like CreateATypeSafeList, GenericEnumeration, ImplementingGenericInterfaces were simillar to those among the demos performed. Also, the author, Jesse Liberty is a Microsoft .NET MVP and author of Programming C#, Programming VB 2005, Programming ASP.NET, Programming .Net Windows Applications and various other books which explains why the book is so cohesive and contemporary. Like any o

Excellent Primer for C# 2.0

For those of you who have been programming in C# since its release a few years ago, you recognize an update for the language was becoming overdue. Microsoft has delivered by Visual C# 2005 which will be released with the upcoming Visual Studio 2005. In "Visual C# 2005 - A Developer's Notebook" the author has done a wonderful job of taking you through the new features of the language and showing you "what you need to know to get it done" about this new release. Before you purchase this book, realize it is not a C# primer nor beginner's guide. This book was written for those who already are familiar and use C#. A lot of what the author goes into will make no sense unless you already have a firm understanding of the language and are familiar with its constructs. For those of you who are familiar with the language, you are in for a terrific reference guide to the new features. The author has taken each new feature, such as Accessing Objects in the Global Namespace, and tells you how you do it programatically (with source code), explains what you just did, and gives an explanation about other uses or "gotchas" that might result by using this feature. To conclude, he gives a reference to another source so that if you want to learn more, or go farther in-depth, you can easily find out more -- most often by pointing back to the MSDN developer library. Often, when there is a point the author wishes to bring you attention to, he uses the sidebar to draw your attention. A quick blurb about a special syntax or argument that could shed a lot of light on some of the new concepts. Overall, a great companion to the upcoming Visual Studio 2005 C# release. If you are an experienced C# programmer and want to know what is ahead -- this would be well worth adding to your bookshelf.
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