John Baird
Coatesville, Pennsylvanie, États-Unis
Information générale
Catégorie:
Visual FoxPro et .NET
Versions des environnements
Network:
Windows 2000 Server
>OK, I am considering throwing in the towel. I have decided to give dotnet a try. I have read several books about C# and VB#, and I believe that I will be able to write some code relatively fast. But I don't want to start in the wrong end, I want to do it right from the start, so I ask for some advice.
>
>First of all, I have Visual Studio 2012 Professional installed and running on my computer. I also have MS SQL server 2012 installed and running. And I will focus on C#.
>
>One of my first questions is, should I use Windows Forms or WPF Forms?
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>In VFP I have sub-classed all the base classes, some of them more than one level. Should I do the same in .net also? If so, how?
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>Can anyone recommend a good book (or two) with essential but not too much reading?
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>Are there other important decisions I will have to make early in my learning phase?
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>And last, please don't mock me! I will always remain a VFP lover, and I know that I haven't always written nice things about dotnet. From now on I will avoid writing negative about dotnet until I know better what I am talking about.
Hi Tore,
Good questions.
For the desktop: I would bypass winforms and go to wpf if you are doing desktop apps. Much, much more power. A little harder to grock, but definitely worth it.
If you do web stuff, I would concentrate on HTML5, JS, CSS3 and the offshoots like angular, backbone, etc.
I have a duplicate copy of an older book by the god himself on WPF programming and would be happy to ship it to you if it would help.
Good Luck..
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