Stories recently tagged with 'Book'

Review: Framework Design Guidelines(aspalliance.com)

submitted by keyvankeyvan(4086) 5 years, 4 months ago

In this article Keyvan reviews Framework Design Guidelines, which was a popular .NET book published in 2005 by Addison-Wesley. Its primary focus is on giving several guidelines and tips to design powerful frameworks or rich libraries using .NET. read more...

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Win a new Apress book!(en.csharp-online.net)

submitted by HyleHyle(2755) 5 years, 4 months ago

The C# Online.NET Monthly Contest is offering a free Apress book to our most prolific contributor of the month. One prize is awarded per month to the contributor selected by the judges. You are automatically entered in the contest simply by editing pages, creating new pages, adding C# source code examples, or answering questions on C# Online.NET Forums. A winning strategy might be to pick a particular section to work on and develop over the Summer. Both the C# Language Reference and the .NET Common Language Runtime (CLR) need further development. For example, you might decide to beef up our C# Code Snippets. Or, you might want to create a comprehensive section on C# generics. Perhaps you would like to contribute a few articles on topics that interest you for our C# Articles. If you, also, know the Java language, you might want to develop C# for Java Developers further. However you choose to participate in creating the World's best C# encyclopedia, follow the Contributors Guide and be sure your edits fit in with the general style of the site and of the particular section you edit. And, remember: it is quality that matters. Quanity comes into the equation only if the quality is there. Good luck! read more...

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The baby version of CLR via C#(eknowledger.spaces.live.com)

submitted by indicatorindicator(675) 5 years, 5 months ago

It's free! It's on-line! It's 267 pages! It's .NET Book Zero: What the C or C++ Programmer Needs to Know about C# and the .NET Framework and you can download it here read more...

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Free chapter from Charles Petzold's book Applications = Code Markup(blog.krisvandermast.com)

submitted by KvdMKvdM(1695) 5 years, 7 months ago

Free chapter of the book Applications = Code + Markup. read more...

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Book Review - RSS and Atom(dotnetslackers.com)

submitted by garbingarbin(195) 5 years, 8 months ago

I decided to read this book because syndication formats are becoming more and more important as publishing systems for modern web sites. As the author remarks often (and he’s perfectly right) there’s a foundamental difference between a syndication (or publication) format like RSS or Atom (the two formats covered in the book) and a content format like HTML. read more...

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FREE Visual Studio .NET Tips and Tricks Book !!(infoq.com)

submitted by marcosmarcos(2779) 5 years, 9 months ago

Visual Studio .NET Tips and Tricks explains how to use VS.NET efficiently. Organized into short and easy-to-grasp sections, and containing tips and tricks on everything from editing and compiling to debugging and navigating within the VS.NET IDE, this book is a must-read for all .NET developers, regardless of expertise and whether they program in C#, VB.NET, or any other .NET language. This book covers the Visual Studio .NET 2002, 2003, and 2005 Beta 1 releases read more...

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Announcing Our Book! (Windows Developer Power Tools)(frazzleddad.blogspot.com)

submitted by jflowersjflowers(1860) 5 years, 10 months ago

The book is around 1100 pages of goodness on open source and freeware tools you can use to improve your software development work. The book’s all about using tools to bring value to the entire development cycle from writing code to testing to lifecycle management. We’ve got something like 170 tools from Anthem.NET to Sysinternals RegMon to Bugzilla. We chose tools which help improve the quality of code you write, or help improve your productivity as a developer. (We also chose stuff we thought was just plain cool, too.) What’s really neat is that we’ve had a significant number of articles written by the tool creators themselves. This is great because 1) these folks know their own tools inside and out and can best write about the tools’ value, and 2) they were passionate enough to write the tool in the first place and that passion (hopefully!) comes across in their articles. We’ve also had some terrific folks contribute articles to the book as well. James and I have still ended up writing probably 70% of the book ourselves, plus we edited every submission for consistency, style, and content. read more...

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