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Books on C #
Message
From
16/01/2009 12:10:00
 
 
General information
Forum:
ASP.NET
Category:
Other
Title:
Environment versions
Environment:
C# 3.0
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
01373114
Message ID:
01374395
Views:
27
>>>>>Books on C #
>>>>>
>>>>>Hello!
>>>>>If someone has information of books and / or handouts on C # that can download or buy ...
>>>>>Grata!
>>>>>Nusa
>>>>
>>>>Don't know if anyone posted this link
>>>>http://www.foxcentral.net/microsoft/NETforVFPDevelopers.htm
>>>>
>>>>Free book online. Good book if you come from a VFP background. If you like the book you can buy it from Hentzenwerke
>>>
>>>Why do so many people keep recommending a .NET book that came out in 2002? That's three major versions out of date.
>>
>>The fundamentals of .NET has stayed the same. If you started teaching some one VFP you wouldn't start with the features that came in VFP9, you would start with features that have been around for many many versions, fundamentals.
>
>That may be true of VFP but I'm not so sure about applying the same logic to .NET. A lot of additions in C# 3 have changed the way I program. e.g Anonymous Types, Extension Methods, Implicitly Typed Variables (not to mention the stuff that appeared in C#2 like Generics, Nullable Types and Partial Classes).....
>
>>The only reason I reccomend that book here is because it is a .NET book for VFP developers and most people here come from a VFP background.
>>It also helps that the book was written and published by ppl here on UT. I thought it was a great book when I frist read it.

The book recommended is more basic than that though and IMHO, a very good 'Getting Started' book to get a VFP developer familiar with dotnet.
.·*´¨)
.·`TCH
(..·*

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"When the debate is lost, slander becomes the tool of the loser." - Socrates
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"De omnibus dubitandum"
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