>>>Cetin,
>>>
>>>Thank you. I have also purchased about 9 to 11 books and none of them offer the in depth help and information I need. It is increasingly frustrating.
>>>
>>>I'm coming up short on info, or I do not know where to find the info (like you said the online help is poor and cryptic sometimes) -- my style, which is probably like everyone elses, is to know what I can do and then do it as opposed to just learning about the properties and methods on an as needed basis. Sure there is a tremendous set of objects, but as programmers we tend to have up-close and intimate knowledge of every property and method in the most commonly used objects - which is where I'd like to get with .NET.
>>>
>>>Perhaps someone else here can offer some source for information that is more than just "this is that."
>>>
>>>Kind regards,
>>>Derek
>>
>>Yes I'm sure you'd get many other good references. Also check .Net videos (follow my signature), beginner series are for free, rest is well worth the money IMHO.
>>Cetin
>
>Cetin
>
>I remember you commented on those videos before.
>
>I am working my way through some of those videos. I tried a few free ones and felt it was worth paying the subscription based on those. I'm definitely finding them a better learning tool than books.
>
>Nick
Yeah, I do suggest them at every opportunity that I may sound as if I were working for Bob:) They're great and now expression web series included (came to the rescue when I even didn't have an idea which one of the 3 expression versions I should install:)
Cetin