
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)Are you looking to buy Pro C# 2010 and the .NET 4 Platform? Here is the right place to find the great deals. we can offer discounts of up to 90% on Pro C# 2010 and the .NET 4 Platform. Check out the link below:
>> Click Here to See Compare Prices and Get the Best Offers
Pro C# 2010 and the .NET 4 Platform ReviewAs a speaker and a User Group leader, I often get asked "Where do I start learning .NET?". My answer is always "Start with the Troelsen book from Apress". This has been true for previous versions of the framework, and after reading the latest edition covering .NET 4, it still holds true.Andrew takes you on the path that covers what the line of business software developer needs to know about the capabilities of .NET. The book begins with pertinent background information on the evolution of .NET, the Common Type System (CTS), the Common Language Runtime (CLR), and tools like ILDASM and Red-Gate's Reflector. Although not the most exiting reading if you are eager to start writing code, it is important for .NET developers to understand these concepts and tools.
Chapter 2 discusses the various tools (including Notepad++) that can be used to develop in C#. The majority of the readers will be using Visual Studio, but it's good to know (and call out) that you do not have to purchase anything to write C# applications!
Parts 2 and 3 take a deep dive into the C# language itself and along the way explains the pillars of Object Oriented Programming (OOP) and how to implement them in C# and .NET. This is extremely useful to the reader who does not have OOP experience, but is also useful to those coming from another OO language to learn the specifics in C#.
Andrew does a great job explaining the more advanced topics like Generics, Lambdas, Language Integrated Query (LINQ), Multi-Threading, and (recent additions to the framework) the Dynamic Language Runtime and Parallel Programming.
A chapter on Windows Workflow Foundation and Windows Communication Foundation provide a nice intro to those topics, three chapters on ADO.NET (including the new release of the Entity Framework), and whole sections devoted to Windows Presentation Foundation (used for Windows development) and ASP.NET (used web application development) are the core pieces required for standard line of business development.
I have two disappointments with the book, the first is that the ADO.NET chapters include samples for binding data to Windows Forms (WinForms) and not Windows Presentation Foundation. I firmly believe the future of Windows Client development is WPF (not WinForms), and Andrew echoes this by focusing on WPF in the rest of the text. In fact, WinForms is relegated to an Appendix.
My other disappointment is that the new ASP.NET MVC framework isn't discussed as an alternative to ASP.NET WebForms. There are plenty of books out there on MVC, but what I have really liked about these books is that they have presented all of the relevant options and left it up to the reader to decide which direction.
In summary, this book is massive (weighing in at over 1500 pages), and is still the single place to start learning .NET and C#. I have always used his books on the language to learn all the options available as a developer (and get a decent understanding of those topics), then picked up books that do a deep dive into the specifics (like Matthew McDonald's Pro WPF in C# 2010: Windows Presentation Foundation in .NET 4).Pro C# 2010 and the .NET 4 Platform Overview
The first edition of this book was released at the 2001 Tech-Ed conference in Atlanta, Georgia. At that time, the .NET platform was still a beta product, and in many ways, so was this book. This is not to say that the early editions of this text did not have merit-after all, the book was a 2002 Jolt Award finalist and it won the 2003 Referenceware Excellence Award. However, over the years that author Andrew Troelsen spent working with the common language runtime (CLR), he gained a much deeper understanding of the .NET platform and the subtleties of the C# programming language, and he feels that this fifth edition of the book is as close to a "final release as he's come yet.
This new edition has been comprehensively revised and rewritten to make it accurately reflect the C# 4 language specification for the .NET 4 platform. You'll find new chapters covering the important concepts of dynamic lookups, named and optional arguments, Parallel LINQ (PLINQ), improved COM interop, and variance for generics.
If you're checking out this book for the first time, do understand that it's targeted at experienced software professionals and/or graduate students of computer science (so don't expect three chapters on iteration or decision constructs!). The mission of this text is to provide you with a rock-solid foundation in the C# programming language and the core aspects of the .NET platform (assemblies, remoting, Windows Forms, Web Forms, ADO.NET, XML web services, etc.). Once you digest the information presented in these 25 chapters, you'll be in a perfect position to apply this knowledge to your specific programming assignments, and you'll be well equipped to explore the .NET universe on your own terms.
What you'll learn
Be the first to understand the .NET 4 platform and Visual C# 2010.
Discover the ins and outs of the leading .NET technology.
Learn from an award-winning author who has been teaching the .NET world since version 1.0.
Find complete coverage of the WPF, WCF, and WF foundations that support the core .NET platform.
Who this book is for
This book is for anyone with some software development experience who is interested in the new .NET Framework 4 and the C# language. Whether you are moving to .NET for the first time or are already writing applications on .NET 2.0 or .NET 3.5, this book will provide you with a comprehensive grounding in the new technology and serve as a complete reference throughout your coding career.
Table of Contents
The Philosophy of NET
Building C# Applications
Core C# Programming Constructs, Part I
Core C# Programming Constructs, Part II
Defining Encapsulated Class Types
Understanding Inheritance and Polymorphism
Understanding Structured Exception Handling
Understanding Object Lifetime
Working with Interfaces
Understanding Generics
Delegates, Events, and Lambdas
Advanced C# Language Features
LINQ to Objects
Configuring NET Assemblies
Type Reflection, Late Binding, and Attribute-Based Prog
Processes, AppDomains, and Object Contexts
Understanding CIL and the Role of Dynamic Assemblies
Dynamic Types and the Dynamic Language Runtime
Multithreaded and Parallel Programming
File I/O and Object Serialization
ADO.NET Part I: The Connected Layer
ADO.NET Part II: The Disconnected Layer
ADO.NET Part III: The Entity Framework
Introducing LINQ to XML
Introducing Windows Communication Foundation
Introducing Windows Workflow Foundation 40
Introducing Windows Presentation Foundation and XAML
Programming with WPF Controls
WPF Graphics Rendering Services
WPF Resources, Animations, and Styles
WPF Control Templates and UserControls
Building ASP.NET Web Pages
ASP.NET Web Controls, Master Pages and Theme
ASP.NET State Management Techniques
Want to learn more information about Pro C# 2010 and the .NET 4 Platform?
>> Click Here to See All Customer Reviews & Ratings Now