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9780764543845

Beginning VB.NET, 2nd Edition

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  • ISBN13:

    9780764543845

  • ISBN10:

    0764543849

  • Edition: 2nd
  • Format: Paperback
  • Copyright: 2002-08-01
  • Publisher: Wrox
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List Price: $39.99

Summary

What is this book about?Visual Basic .NET is the latest version of the most widely used programming language in the world, popular with professional developers and complete beginners alike. This book will teach you Visual Basic .NET from first principles. You'll quickly and easily learn how to write Visual Basic .NET code and create attractive windows and forms for the users of your applications. To get you started on the road to professional development, you'll also learn about object-oriented programming, creating your own controls, working with databases, creating menus, and working with graphics.This second edition has been thoroughly tested on the full release version of .NET. The book is written in the proven Wrox beginning style with clear explanations and plenty of code samples. Every new concept is explained thoroughly with Try It Out examples and there are end-of-chapter questions to test yourself.What does this book cover?In this book, you will learn how to Install Visual Basic .NET Write Visual Basic .NET code Understand what the .NET Framework is and why it's important Control the flow through your application with loops and branching structures Create useful windows and screens Create your own menus Gain a complete understanding of object-oriented programming Work with graphics Create your own controls Access databases with ADO.NET Create applications for the Web Who is this book for? This book is aimed at readers who wish to learn to program using Visual Basic .NET. It assumes you have no prior experience of programming, but moves at a fast enough pace to be interesting if you have programmed in another language.

Author Biography

<b>Mathew Reynolds</b> After working with Wrox Press on a number of projects since 1999, he is now an in-house author for Wrox Press writing about and working with virtually all aspects of Microsoft .NET. He's also a regular contributor to Wrox's ASPToday and C#Today, and Web Services Architect. He lives and works in North London and can be reached on matthewr@wrox.com. <p> <b>Richard Blair</b> is Web Application Architect specializing in Microsoft Web Technologies, focusing on emerging technology and its impact on business and development. Key areas that he has helped clients evaluate include: streamlining the electronic business process, expanding access to vital information, and creating usable systems. He now works as a Senior Consultant for SEI-Information Technology. Besides his consulting work, he has also co-authored <i>Professional ASP XML, Beginning Visual Basic .NET</i>, and <i>Professional VB.NET</i>, all published by Wrox Press Ltd.<br> Richard has a dual concentration bachelor's degree from the University of Michigan in English Literature and Theatre, so not only is he a Web Architect, he could play one on TV. Richard welcomes qu estions and comments at richblair@hotmail.com. <p> <b>Jonathan Crossland</b> is co-author of <i>Professional Windows DNA</i>, <i>Professional VB.NET,</i> and <i>Beginning VB.NET</i>. He is currently working at Yokogawa Electric Corporation in the UK, where he is happily involved with the creation of software for the Batch manufacturing industry. Jonathan has been working in and out of various software technologies for eight years now, and spends most of his time in C# and ASP.NET. Jonathan also works with VB, VB.NET, and web technologies such as JavaScript, DHTML, XML, ASP, and of course, writing Web Services. <p> <b>Thearon Willis</b> began his career in computers in 1980 as a computer operator. During the fall of 1980 he took a course in BASIC programming using the Radio Shack TSR-80 computer and has been hooked on programming ever since.<br> learning the BASIC language, Thearon moved on to learn COBOL and began writing programs to help automate some of his daily tasks as a computer operator. Advancing his career, Thearon became an Operations Analyst and learned several other languages to assist in his job. In 1989, Thearon moved into Systems Programming and started programming in S370 assembler language. He coded batch programs in assembler language and then moved on to code CICS programs. The Help Desk and Network Operations used these batch and on-line programs to perform some of their daily tasks, such as monitoring CICS printers and polling sales. During this time, he started working with relational databases on the mainframe and immediately saw the benefits that relational databases provided. Between the years of 1988 and 1993, Thearon learned several more programming languages, which include QBASIC, Pascal and C++. Thearon decided that he enjoyed programming so much that he switched his career path and became a developer full time. The first application that Thearon worked on was written in assembler language and included over 70 assembler programs. To help automate some of the tasks that were performed by the department that used this application, he wrote several programs in Visual Basic. One of these programs read and processed data from message queues that were populated from the mainframe and performed automated balancing. Thearon currently works as a senior consultant and develops intranet applications using ASP, DHTML, XML, JavaScript, VBScript, VB COM components, and SQL Server. He lives with his wife Margie and daughter Stephanie in the Raleigh, North Carolina area.

Table of Contents

Introduction.
Chapter 1: Welcome to Visual Basic .NET.
Chapter 2. Writing Software.
Chapter 3. Controlling the Flow.
Chapter 4. Building Objects.
Chapter 5. The Microsoft .NET Framework.
Chapter 6. Working with Data Structures.
Chapter 7. Building Windows Applications.
Chapter 8. Displaying Dialog Boxes.
Chapter 9. Creating Menus.
Chapter 10. Advanced Object-Oriented Techniques.
Chapter 11. Debugging and Error Handling.
Chapter 12. Building Class Libraries.
Chapter 13. Creating Your Own Custom Controls.
Chapter 14. Programming Custom Graphics.
Chapter 15. Accessing Databases.
Chapter 16. Database Programming with SQL Server and ADO.NET.
Chapter 17. Web Forms.
Chapter 18. Visual Basic .NET and XML.
Chapter 19. Web Services.
Appendix A. Where to Now?
Appendix B. Exercise Answers.
Index.

Supplemental Materials

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