Murach's ADO.NET 4 Database Programming with C# 2010 (Murach: Training & Reference)
Author | : | |
Rating | : | 4.62 (570 Votes) |
Asin | : | 1890774634 |
Format Type | : | paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 756 Pages |
Publish Date | : | 2017-08-15 |
Language | : | English |
DESCRIPTION:
Erica Gieras said This book was the best on the topic that I have read.. I needed to learn ADO.NET for my job and this book was the best on the topic I read the entire book in about This book was the best on the topic that I have read. I needed to learn ADO.NET for my job and this book was the best on the topic I read the entire book in about 3 weeks. Everything is explained wonderfully. I love how the examples are laid out on the right with explanations on the left. I also really found the program files extremely helpful. I opened each chapters program and followed right. weeks. Everything is explained wonderfully. I love how the examples are laid out on the right with explanations on the left. I also really found the program files extremely helpful. I opened each chapters program and followed right. "Excellent book" according to Harry Rosenblatt. This is a very good book, well worth the money. The samples in the book have real life application, none of this Hello World type of stuff. I have adapted them to be my template when creating new applications.I would highly recommend this book to anyone wanting to learn to manipulate databases with Visual Basic.. Murach's ADO.NET 3.5 C# 2008 ed Very good book for beginner to intermediate. Very good introduction to Entity Framework. I wish the book had more coverage using the ADO.NET programatically than using the data source wizards. I would rather see and use compact, efficient, and controllable code with ADO.NET objects than defining via the data source wizards. Also the book wa
And Murach's distinctive "paired-pages" formatwhere each skill is presented with examples and advice in a single 2-page spreadis great for both targeted learning and reference.. You'll learn how to:quickly create Windows and web applications by dragging-and-dropping data controls in Visual Studio 2010code your own presentation, business, and database classes with ADO.NET 4 to build 3-layer applicationsthe route the professionals take for flexibility and controldisplay and manipulate data in web applications by using ASP.NET data controls designed specifically for that purpose, like GridView and DetailsViewwork with XML-specific features of ADO.NET to read, write, and manipulate XML data in your applicationsuse Visual Studio's Report Designer and ReportViewer control to create and display reports in both Windows and web applicationsuse LINQ to SQL instead of standard SQL so you can query databases using C# constructscreate Entity Data Models so you can use LINQ to Entities to work with business objects, like invoices, while the Entity Framework handles the database detailsPractice exercises at the end of every chapter and complete database applications throughout help you master every skill along the way. Now in its 4th Edition, this book shows C# developers how to use Visual Studio and ADO.NET to develop database applications the way the best professionals do
About the Author Anne Boehm has over 30 years of experience as an enterprise programmer. In the past 5 years, she's added C# to her programming repertoire, and she's authored or co-authored books on Visual Basic, C#, ADO.NET, and ASP.NET.Ged Mead wrote his first computer program in 1983 and he hasn't stopped since. After training as a systems analyst in the military, he has spent time training others how to develop and use computer applications in the military and the police service. . He has written many technical articles for developers and is a prolific blogger, specializing in explaining how to defeat those, often undocumented, gotchas that c
After training as a systems analyst in the military, he has spent time training others how to develop and use computer applications in the military and the police service. In the past 5 years, she's added C# to her programming repertoire, and she's authored or co-authored books on Visual Basic, C#, ADO.NET, and ASP.NET.Ged Mead wrote his first computer program in 1983 and he hasn't stopped since. She got started with Visual Basic in the days of VB5, and has been programming on .NET since its in