Pro ASP.NET 3.5 in C# 2008, Second Edition (Windows.Net) | 
enlarge | Authors: Matthew Macdonald, Mario Szpuszta Publisher: Apress Category: Book
List Price: $59.99 Buy New: $35.43 You Save: $24.56 (41%)
New (33) Used (12) from $35.43
Rating: 10 reviews Sales Rank: 4205
Media: Paperback Edition: 2 Pages: 1498 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 4.6 Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 7 x 2.4
ISBN: 1590598938 Dewey Decimal Number: 005.276 EAN: 9781590598931 ASIN: 1590598938
Publication Date: November 15, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: New book, ships out within 24 hours, 100% satisfaction guaranteed, may have slight shelf wear
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Product Description
ASP.NET 3.5 is the latest version of Microsoft’s revolutionary ASP.NET technology. It is the principal standard for creating dynamic web pages on the Windows platform. Pro ASP.NET 3.5 in C# 2008 raises the bar for high–quality, practical advice on learning and deploying Microsoft’s dynamic web solution. Seasoned .NET professionals Matthew MacDonald and Mario Szpuszta explain how you can get the most from this groundbreaking new technology. They cover ASP.NET 3.5 as a whole, illustrating both the brand–new features and the functionality carried over from previous versions of ASP. This book will give you the knowledge you need to code real ASP.NET 3.5 applications in the best possible style. The book will teach you ASP.NET 3.5 starting with core concepts to more advanced topics. You will learn - Core concepts of ASP.NET 3.5. Why it’s special. What it’s fundamental principals are. The basics of Visual Studio. How ASP.NET 3.5 controls are created, and how they fit into ASP.NET 3.5 pages, ultimately creating full applications
- Data access details. The intricacies of ADO.NET and how to perform data binding to many sources from databases to file streams to XML. We include LINQ coverage so you’re on the bleeding edge
- Security. Once considered the Achilles heel of all Windows web applications, security has vastly improved and is a cornerstone of ASP.NET 3.5. This section explains the various forms of available security, and how to best apply them
- Taking things further using advanced user interface techniques. This includes user controls, customer server controls, client–side JavaScript, and GDI+.
- Web services. In an increasingly connected world, working with web services grows in importance. This book will show you how to work with them.
- ASP.NET AJAX, with an emphasis on comtemporary web development techniques
- Development using Internet Information Services 7, Microsoft’s premier web hosting platform.
- And much more.
Related Titles - Pro ASP.NET 3.5 Server Controls with AJAX Components
- Pro WPF in C# 2008: Windows Presentation Foundation with .NET 3.5, Second Edition
- Pro C# 2008 and the .NET 3.5 Platform, Fourth Edition
- Pro LINQ: Language Integrated Query in C# 2008
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| Customer Reviews: Read 5 more reviews...
Excellent: better than others May 5, 2008 Timothee H. Howland (Nashville, TN) This was a breath of fresh air, and restored my hopes that some authors do care about training, really teaching, really conveying meaning -not just padding pages. This book gives excellent overviews of web development, of web-development with ASP.NET, and of Visual Studio. All topics thereafter are properly introduced, the big picture conveyed, before details explored. Code dumps are sparse and pertinent, not filler fluff. Writing style is of the highest quality: rich, correct, to the point, but interesting. The author makes the topic very exciting, and seems to know you, seems to know your level, what you need explained.
Great book March 30, 2008 Alex Ng (Canada) This book is the best so far that I've read on ASP.NET. I will list the good points. 1. Explains the internal workings of ASP.NET and what goes on behind the scenes unlike other books who just teach you the syntax. 2. Explains the pros and cons of using different but related controls/classes so that we can make an intelligent choice. 3. Explains the properties of classes concisely and with simple examples. 4. Explains the history of Internet server, visual studio IDE, asp.net. This is really an excellent, nearly comprehensive book touching on nearly all aspect of asp.net. However, it doesn't teach you C#, the programming language which is found on another book.
Still A Great Book, Just Too Long March 19, 2008 Daniel McKinnon (Tewksbury, MA USA) 'Pro ASP.NET 3.5 in C# 2008' by Matthew McDonald is an update to the earlier versions that covered ASP.NET in the .NET 2.0 flavor and earlier. With this updated revision you get 200+ pages of new material covering such new concepts as the incredibly hyped LINQ, ASP.NET AJAX and Silverlight. The content here is VAST, with 33 chapters and 1500+ pages. The content is broken up in logical fashion from the basics of ASP.NET to data types and conditional loops to database access and everything you would need to know. I like this book perfectly fine and think it's a good resource but I can't imagine that most people are going to sit down for the weekend and start reading this cover to cover. With the previous version I felt that some content needed to be trimmed and I feel the same with this edition as well. Good writing, nice examples but the editor needed to take out the red marker and make this a manageable size. The core audience is someone that is new to ASP.NET and wants to learn. This encyclopedia is tough to learn from and intimidating in general. Is it a usable ASP.NET book?? Very much so, just a bit too long and this might turn some people off in the long run. **** RECOMMENDED
Great ASP.NET 3.5 Resource March 19, 2008 Franc Stratton (Nashville, TN, USA) This book is almost too thorough, and I highly recommend it if you are a serious programmer or software architect for ASP.NET web apps. I don't recommend many books since most provide superficial overviews with content can be gleaned free from Google or MSDN searches. You won't be disappointed in the sections on security, AJAX, JavaScript, and deployment. This book and Scott Guthrie are the only two sources that I trust for ASP.NET development. Although it covers LINQ, I only use this technology if you access data from a database via a stored procedure; otherwise you bypass the DBA. Not good for big shops like I work for. There are too many cowboy programmers out there who lack the team concept of checks and balances. LINQ is great for XML and iterating through object collections. Great buy and better resource.
A must have Book January 1, 2008 T. Anderson (PA USA) 7 out of 8 found this review helpful
This book is an excellent resource for learning ASP.NET 3.5. It also serves as a great reference. It is a comprehensive book that covers all of .NET 3.5, not just the new features in .NET 3.5, but all the features that have been there over the last several releases. Mathew includes chapters on Linq, ASP.NET AJAX, and Silverlight. If you only want to learn about the new features in .NET 3.5, buy separate books on ASP.NET AJAX and Silverlight. Mathew does a great job of putting Linq into it proper place within a common ASP.NET 3.5 Architecture. So far he has done this best job of this I have seen in a book. One reviewer on Amazon pointed out that the book has a lot of material from previous versions. That is to be expected since all the previous versions are included in the technology. Like I said above, this book covers everything. Mathew does a great job relating everything to real world scenarios. He also provides very usable code samples. If you are developing in ASP.NET 3.5, this is a must have book.
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