Maximizing ASP.NET: Real World, Object-Oriented Development

| Author | : | |
| Rating | : | 4.59 (581 Votes) |
| Asin | : | 0321294475 |
| Format Type | : | paperback |
| Number of Pages | : | 336 Pages |
| Publish Date | : | 2014-02-18 |
| Language | : | English |
DESCRIPTION:
From the Back CoverPraise for Maximizing ASP.NET"Whether you want to improve your existing ASP.NET skills or are looking for a book that will give you the grounding and support you need to get started in ASP.NET development, this is the book for you! Jeff's approach is simple—he explains new methods in a logical, no-nonsense way and includes real examples that demonstrate the .NET way to perform a traditional activity."—John Timney, Microsoft MVP, ASP.NET Web Services Senior Consultant, British Telecom
Maximizing ASP.NET: Real World, Object-Oriented Development book on paperback has been released on 2014-02-18. consist of 336 of pages and writen by Jeffrey Putz are really nice book to read. Although it oficially circulated on paperback but you still download it on other format or just read it online from our website.
brecklundin said Extremely readable developer's guide to developing ASP.NET. I cannot say enough good about this text. I find the author very readable and literate. The examples are clearly written and well commented.The concepts/tasks involved in developing real ASP.NET applications (vs. simply a series of script based pages) is a long needed next step for developers coming from a more script-based background. And for developers used to writing desktop applications it draws on the techniques we have learned then expands them into using ASP.NET "Extremely readable developer's guide to developing ASP.NET" according to brecklundin. I cannot say enough good about this text. I find the author very readable and literate. The examples are clearly written and well commented.The concepts/tasks involved in developing real ASP.NET applications (vs. simply a series of script based pages) is a long needed next step for developers coming from a more script-based background. And for developers used to writing desktop applications it draws on the techniques we have learned then expands them into using ASP.NET 2.0 to create full strength ASP.NET web applications.The examples well commented and consistent. Because examples are given in both VB.NET and C#, I even have learned enough C. .0 to create full strength ASP.NET web applications.The examples well commented and consistent. Because examples are given in both VB.NET and C#, I even have learned enough C. "How to build applications, not just pages using ASP.NET 2" according to Jason Engler. This book attempts to teach developers how to use ASP.NET *correctly* to build applications, rather than pages. However, the author has tried to cover too much ground in a book of only How to build applications, not just pages using ASP.NET 2 This book attempts to teach developers how to use ASP.NET *correctly* to build applications, rather than pages. However, the author has tried to cover too much ground in a book of only 336 pages.The first two chapters attempt to teach non-OOP programmers how to do OOP programming in both C# and VB.NET. The lack of detail and exhaustive examples make this nothing more than a review for experienced OOP programmers. Anyone seeking to learn OOP programming from these 3How to build applications, not just pages using ASP.NET 2 Jason Engler This book attempts to teach developers how to use ASP.NET *correctly* to build applications, rather than pages. However, the author has tried to cover too much ground in a book of only 336 pages.The first two chapters attempt to teach non-OOP programmers how to do OOP programming in both C# and VB.NET. The lack of detail and exhaustive examples make this nothing more than a review for experienced OOP programmers. Anyone seeking to learn OOP programming from these 34 pages will be disappointed.The rest of the book comes closer to meeting his objective. His constant discussion of coding to interfaces and n-tier development are the high points . pages will be disappointed.The rest of the book comes closer to meeting his objective. His constant discussion of coding to interfaces and n-tier development are the high points . How to build applications, not just pages using ASP.NET 2 This book attempts to teach developers how to use ASP.NET *correctly* to build applications, rather than pages. However, the author has tried to cover too much ground in a book of only 336 pages.The first two chapters attempt to teach non-OOP programmers how to do OOP programming in both C# and VB.NET. The lack of detail and exhaustive examples make this nothing more than a review for experienced OOP programmers. Anyone seeking to learn OOP programming from these 3How to build applications, not just pages using ASP.NET 2 Jason Engler This book attempts to teach developers how to use ASP.NET *correctly* to build applications, rather than pages. However, the author has tried to cover too much ground in a book of only 336 pages.The first two chapters attempt to teach non-OOP programmers how to do OOP programming in both C# and VB.NET. The lack of detail and exhaustive examples make this nothing more than a review for experienced OOP programmers. Anyone seeking to learn OOP programming from these 34 pages will be disappointed.The rest of the book comes closer to meeting his objective. His constant discussion of coding to interfaces and n-tier development are the high points . pages will be disappointed.The rest of the book comes closer to meeting his objective. His constant discussion of coding to interfaces and n-tier development are the high points . 6 pages.The first two chapters attempt to teach non-OOP programmers how to do OOP programming in both C# and VB.NET. The lack of detail and exhaustive examples make this nothing more than a review for experienced OOP programmers. Anyone seeking to learn OOP programming from these How to build applications, not just pages using ASP.NET 2 This book attempts to teach developers how to use ASP.NET *correctly* to build applications, rather than pages. However, the author has tried to cover too much ground in a book of only 336 pages.The first two chapters attempt to teach non-OOP programmers how to do OOP programming in both C# and VB.NET. The lack of detail and exhaustive examples make this nothing more than a review for experienced OOP programmers. Anyone seeking to learn OOP programming from these 3How to build applications, not just pages using ASP.NET 2 Jason Engler This book attempts to teach developers how to use ASP.NET *correctly* to build applications, rather than pages. However, the author has tried to cover too much ground in a book of only 336 pages.The first two chapters attempt to teach non-OOP programmers how to do OOP programming in both C# and VB.NET. The lack of detail and exhaustive examples make this nothing more than a review for experienced OOP programmers. Anyone seeking to learn OOP programming from these 34 pages will be disappointed.The rest of the book comes closer to meeting his objective. His constant discussion of coding to interfaces and n-tier development are the high points . pages will be disappointed.The rest of the book comes closer to meeting his objective. His constant discussion of coding to interfaces and n-tier development are the high points . How to build applications, not just pages using ASP.NET 2 Jason Engler This book attempts to teach developers how to use ASP.NET *correctly* to build applications, rather than pages. However, the author has tried to cover too much ground in a book of only 336 pages.The first two chapters attempt to teach non-OOP programmers how to do OOP programming in both C# and VB.NET. The lack of detail and exhaustive examples make this nothing more than a review for experienced OOP programmers. Anyone seeking to learn OOP programming from these 34 pages will be disappointed.The rest of the book comes closer to meeting his objective. His constant discussion of coding to interfaces and n-tier development are the high points . pages will be disappointed.The rest of the book comes closer to meeting his objective. His constant discussion of coding to interfaces and n-tier development are the high points . "One of the few books that takes you beyond the API." according to pg9One of the few books that takes you beyond the API. pg94au I found this book, while looking around for a book that goes beyond writing 20 line sample pages, and examines how a well-designed ASP.NET application should be built.Although I did not come from an ASP background, this book does emphasize how one's thinking should change when making the move from ASP (or any similar technology, such as PHP), to ASP.NET. If the point of this book had to be summed up in a single sentence, it could be the author's claim that "an ASP.NET application is more than just a bunch of pages", as many ASP sites seem to be.The beginning of the book is only for those who still need to be converted to OOP, and it argues t. au. I found this book, while looking around for a book that goes beyond writing 20 line sample pages, and examines how a well-designed ASP.NET application should be built.Although I did not come from an ASP background, this book does emphasize how one's thinking should change when making the move from ASP (or any similar technology, such as PHP), to ASP.NET. If the point of this book had to be summed up in a single sentence, it could be the author's claim that "an ASP.NET application is more than just a bunch of pages", as many ASP sites seem to be.The beginning of the book is only for those who still need to be converted to OOP, and it argues t
After flirting with various jobs in the broadcast world, Jeff returned to computers and welcomed the Internet in 1998, working in various programming and management roles for several companies specializing in vertical market content.Jeff's POP Forums application (popforums) has been downloaded tens of thousands of t
