>>I tried that one and it didn't work for me.
>>I settled on C# For Experienced Programmers by Paul Deitel et al.
>>That was helpful.
>
>The Deitel book was very good as well, yes.
>
>What I liked about Kevin's book was that it provided a good bridge from VFP to topics like abstract classes and interfaces (something Les eschewed in his book). Kevin's book was "dry", but packed with good examples. I had to really get my hands dirty with .NET for months before Kevin's book made sense, but found it to be invaluable for years afterwards.
Glad that it worked for you.
I had to take another path - wipe the VFP memory clean and start from scratch.
I'm still maintaining some VFP apps, and when I look at them I think of Thomas Wolfe's (not "The Right Stuff" Thom Wolfe) classic "You Can't Go Home Again."
He was right. You can try, but you really can't
Anyone who does not go overboard- deserves to.
Malcolm Forbes, Sr.