Teach Yourself Visual Studio® .NET 2003 in 21 Days [Electronic resources] نسخه متنی

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Teach Yourself Visual Studio® .NET 2003 in 21 Days [Electronic resources] - نسخه متنی

Jason Beres

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How This Book Is Organized


Starting with the Visual Studio .NET IDE and writing Windows and Web applications, you'll dive right into Visual Studio .NET in the first 7 days of your 21-day journey. All the concepts that you learn in Week 1 are critical to writing applications using .NET. By the end of the week, you'll understand the ins and outs of writing, testing, debugging, and deploying Windows Forms and ASP.NET applications.

In Week 2, you get into the meat of .NET and learn how to access data, work with XML, and write components. By going through the lessons in Week 2, you'll be able to write data- and component-driven applications that can be accessed from the desktop, the Web, or through XML Web services.

Week 3 introduces you to some supporting tools that ship with Visual Studio .NET, but are less well known than topics such as data access and Web services. You'll learn how to automate the Visual Studio .NET IDE with the new automation capabilities in .NET, how to write data-driven reports using Crystal Reports, and how to use Visual SourceSafe from within the Visual Studio .NET IDE. You'll also learn about some lesser known but very powerful tools that ship with Visual Studio .NET, such as the Application Center Test tool that enables you to stress test your applications. You'll also get an introduction to object role modeling using Visio, which is a conceptual data-modeling platform that integrates with Visual Studio .NET and ODBC-compliant data sources.

Each day is designed to give you the information you need to start using Visual Studio .NET right away. I can't cover every aspect of the .NET Framework, but you don't need a book like that when you're just learning the tool. Everything I've written is geared toward what you need now, and each day I give you links to further information online that will supplement what you learned.

Speaking of online support, the popularity and acceptance of Visual Studio .NET and the .NET Framework have created an enormous online community of informational Web sites containing tons of great articles, code samples, and complete sample applications of every aspect of .NET development that you can think of. The best online resources I've found are


  • http://www.dotnet247.com
    This site is unreal. It's a summary site that catalogs all the .NET sites on the Web, including Microsoft. Just type in a topic or keyword you're interested in, and I can almost guarantee you that all the articles on the Web related to that topic will come up in its Google search engine.


  • http://www.123aspx.com
    This site is just like the dotnet247 site, except that it relates to ASP.NET-specific information. It's a hugely important resource to have at your fingertips when you need to get information fast.


  • http://msdn.microsoft.com
    The million-page developer heaven. This site has not only thousands of .NET samples and articles, but it also covers all technologies from Microsoft, not just .NET. This should be your browser's home page, just to see what's fun and new every day for developers using Microsoft technologies.


  • http://www.angrycoder.com
    This is not a sample Web site, but rather a .NET e-zine. It's not a site you'll go to every day, but you should check it out once a month to read some of the editorial pieces and personal anecdotes of other .NET developers. At a minimum, you'll get a good laugh reading some of the pieces, which is sometimes necessary when learning new technologies.


  • http://www.gotdotnet.com
    This is Microsoft's .NET community portal. It has message boards, code uploads, and tons of samples. The best thing about this site is the .NET QuickStart tutorials are online and working, so you always have a reference place to go if you need access to the QuickStarts.


  • http://www.asp.net
    This is Microsoft's ASP.NET community Web site. This site has great links to other sites, great downloads for server controls for ASP.NET, and an extremely active message board. This is a good place to get ASP.NET questions answered.


  • www.windowsforms.net
    This is Microsoft's Windows Forms community site. I personally love Windows Forms because they provide a richer development environment for the applications than the browser does, and they can be run just like browser-based applications. So, make sure that you check out this site to get hard-core Windows Forms information.



I've been working with .NET since the alpha version. Since then, I've started a .NET user group in Florida that has grown from 30 people to more than 1,000, with monthly meetings in three different cities. So, as you start down the path of .NET, know that there is a lot of support and information out there to help you learn. You should find a user group in your area and get involvedthere are many developers out there just like you. You can check out these resources for user groups in your area:


  • http://www.ineta.org
    The International .NET User Group Association was founded to help user groups around the world get the resources and information they need to spread the word about .NET. You can go to this site and search by country, region, and state to find a user group in your area.


  • http://www.fladotnet.net
    This is the user group I helped found in Florida. We have monthly meetings in Boca Raton, Miami, and Tampa, so if you're in Florida, you can go to the site and get info about the next meeting.


  • http://www.nonprofitways.net
    I helped found this organization, which enables developers to write applications for not-for-profit organizations. A lot of developers aren't using .NET at work, but they're involved with user groups and other online communities. So, a couple of friends and I decided that we could funnel some of that excitement and energy to give something back to the world. This started as something for our local user group to work on, but has grown into a worldwide community. If you want to write some .NET code in real-life applications, check out the site and get involved!



My own site will have the code samples, fixes, errors and omissions, additional stuff I forgot about, and other goodies for this book at http://www.vbasp.net.


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