.NET Books
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Hi, I am planning to suggest a few .net books for my friends who are planning to join the .net party...I suggested them the following books 1) Jeffrey Richter's Book 2) Essential .NET by Don Box 3) ASP.NET in C# by Fritz Onion 4) Advanced .NET Remoting by Ingo Rammer. 5) ADO.NET book by David Sceppa 6) ADO.NET book by Shawn Wildermuth Could anyone suggest some other books...? may be something more recent.. PS: Personally I don't like wrox press(I don't know what the new name is !!!) books, but if the book is really good, I will suggest that too. Madhu.
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Hi, I am planning to suggest a few .net books for my friends who are planning to join the .net party...I suggested them the following books 1) Jeffrey Richter's Book 2) Essential .NET by Don Box 3) ASP.NET in C# by Fritz Onion 4) Advanced .NET Remoting by Ingo Rammer. 5) ADO.NET book by David Sceppa 6) ADO.NET book by Shawn Wildermuth Could anyone suggest some other books...? may be something more recent.. PS: Personally I don't like wrox press(I don't know what the new name is !!!) books, but if the book is really good, I will suggest that too. Madhu.
Hey, were's Tom Archer on that list? :omg: Kant wrote: Actually she replied back to me "You shouldn't fix the bug. You should kill it"
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Hi, I am planning to suggest a few .net books for my friends who are planning to join the .net party...I suggested them the following books 1) Jeffrey Richter's Book 2) Essential .NET by Don Box 3) ASP.NET in C# by Fritz Onion 4) Advanced .NET Remoting by Ingo Rammer. 5) ADO.NET book by David Sceppa 6) ADO.NET book by Shawn Wildermuth Could anyone suggest some other books...? may be something more recent.. PS: Personally I don't like wrox press(I don't know what the new name is !!!) books, but if the book is really good, I will suggest that too. Madhu.
Visual Studio.Net: The .Net Framework Black Book Julia Templeman and David Vitter, Coriolis press, ISBN 1 - 57610 - 995 - X This is pretty close to being the Petzold equivalent in the .Net framework world, IMO. '--8<------------------------ Ex Datis: Duncan Jones Merrion Computing Ltd
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Hi, I am planning to suggest a few .net books for my friends who are planning to join the .net party...I suggested them the following books 1) Jeffrey Richter's Book 2) Essential .NET by Don Box 3) ASP.NET in C# by Fritz Onion 4) Advanced .NET Remoting by Ingo Rammer. 5) ADO.NET book by David Sceppa 6) ADO.NET book by Shawn Wildermuth Could anyone suggest some other books...? may be something more recent.. PS: Personally I don't like wrox press(I don't know what the new name is !!!) books, but if the book is really good, I will suggest that too. Madhu.
I would also highly suggest John Gough's "Compiling for the .NET CLR" - but then again, you guys know I love the internals stuff :) Cheers, Tom Archer, Inside C# Mainstream is just a word for the way things always have been -- just a middle-of-the-road, tow-the-line thing; a front for the Man serving up the same warmed-over slop he did yesterday and expecting you to say, "Thank you sir, may I have another?"
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Hi, I am planning to suggest a few .net books for my friends who are planning to join the .net party...I suggested them the following books 1) Jeffrey Richter's Book 2) Essential .NET by Don Box 3) ASP.NET in C# by Fritz Onion 4) Advanced .NET Remoting by Ingo Rammer. 5) ADO.NET book by David Sceppa 6) ADO.NET book by Shawn Wildermuth Could anyone suggest some other books...? may be something more recent.. PS: Personally I don't like wrox press(I don't know what the new name is !!!) books, but if the book is really good, I will suggest that too. Madhu.
Charles Petzold's - Programming Windows (C# edition)
There are only 10 types of people in this world....those that understand binary, and those that do not.
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Visual Studio.Net: The .Net Framework Black Book Julia Templeman and David Vitter, Coriolis press, ISBN 1 - 57610 - 995 - X This is pretty close to being the Petzold equivalent in the .Net framework world, IMO. '--8<------------------------ Ex Datis: Duncan Jones Merrion Computing Ltd
Merrion wrote: This is pretty close to being the Petzold equivalent in the .Net framework world What about Petzold's book? To me it read like his Win32 book but for .NET. :) James "I despise the city and much prefer being where a traffic jam means a line-up at McDonald's" Me when telling a friend why I wouldn't want to live with him
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Hi, I am planning to suggest a few .net books for my friends who are planning to join the .net party...I suggested them the following books 1) Jeffrey Richter's Book 2) Essential .NET by Don Box 3) ASP.NET in C# by Fritz Onion 4) Advanced .NET Remoting by Ingo Rammer. 5) ADO.NET book by David Sceppa 6) ADO.NET book by Shawn Wildermuth Could anyone suggest some other books...? may be something more recent.. PS: Personally I don't like wrox press(I don't know what the new name is !!!) books, but if the book is really good, I will suggest that too. Madhu.
I highly recommend Inside C#, 2nd Edition by Tom Archer - this book is a must read for all C# developers! Erik - Author, Learn XML In A Weekend
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I would also highly suggest John Gough's "Compiling for the .NET CLR" - but then again, you guys know I love the internals stuff :) Cheers, Tom Archer, Inside C# Mainstream is just a word for the way things always have been -- just a middle-of-the-road, tow-the-line thing; a front for the Man serving up the same warmed-over slop he did yesterday and expecting you to say, "Thank you sir, may I have another?"
Tom, any updates on your new book, is it done or at prints. Cheers, Kannan
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Hi, I am planning to suggest a few .net books for my friends who are planning to join the .net party...I suggested them the following books 1) Jeffrey Richter's Book 2) Essential .NET by Don Box 3) ASP.NET in C# by Fritz Onion 4) Advanced .NET Remoting by Ingo Rammer. 5) ADO.NET book by David Sceppa 6) ADO.NET book by Shawn Wildermuth Could anyone suggest some other books...? may be something more recent.. PS: Personally I don't like wrox press(I don't know what the new name is !!!) books, but if the book is really good, I will suggest that too. Madhu.
A Programmer's Introduction to C# by Eric Gunnerson_
Never take a problem to your boss unless you have a solution._
This signature was created by "Code Project Quoter". -
Tom, any updates on your new book, is it done or at prints. Cheers, Kannan
I've got about 2 weeks to go and then I'm done!! Cheers, Tom Archer, Inside C# Mainstream is just a word for the way things always have been -- just a middle-of-the-road, tow-the-line thing; a front for the Man serving up the same warmed-over slop he did yesterday and expecting you to say, "Thank you sir, may I have another?"
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Hi, I am planning to suggest a few .net books for my friends who are planning to join the .net party...I suggested them the following books 1) Jeffrey Richter's Book 2) Essential .NET by Don Box 3) ASP.NET in C# by Fritz Onion 4) Advanced .NET Remoting by Ingo Rammer. 5) ADO.NET book by David Sceppa 6) ADO.NET book by Shawn Wildermuth Could anyone suggest some other books...? may be something more recent.. PS: Personally I don't like wrox press(I don't know what the new name is !!!) books, but if the book is really good, I will suggest that too. Madhu.
Inside C# , 2nd Edition by Tom Archer is a MUST buy IMHO . It describes all the aspects of the c# language and it goes down a lot of times to the il code to show you the proof why certain constructs or options are better or why things work that kind of way ... A very refreshing perpective , teaching the language with a lot of low level details about the il generated code that makes you truly aware of the language , 5 stars :-) And btw if you like low level detail, Compiling for the .NET , Inside IL Assembler and CIL Programming under the hood are very good if you want to learn more about il language . Programming Windows with c# by Petzold is a good book on windows forms , and Advanced Remoting is also a very good book . Cheers,Joao Vaz One protocol to rule them all One protocol to find them One protocol to bring them all And in the darkness, bind them In the land of mordor.net, where the shadowed fibers lie