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Applied Microsoft .NET Framework Programming by
Jeffrey Richter
Applied Microsoft .NET Framework Programming
by Jeffrey Richter
Publisher: Microsoft Press; 1 edition (January 23,
2002) | ISBN: 0735614229 | PDF | 4,2 Mb | 640 pages
Applied Microsoft .NET Framework Programming is a
tutorial. It's meant for programmers who already know an
object-oriented language and want to apply their
knowledge in the standardized environment provided by
the Microsoft .NET Framework. The book, written by
Jeffrey Richter, a programmer and the .NET columnist at
Microsoft's magazine for its developer community, takes
a more or less language-agnostic approach to the
run-time environment (though many illustrative examples
are in C#). It aims to untangle the Common Language
Runtime (CLR) and some of the Framework Class Library (FCL),
and generally succeeds, particularly at the former.
Richter shares his knowledge of the key classes you can
instantiate in the CLR, and the kinds of operations you
can perform on and with them.
You can read this book, or individual chapters, from
beginning to end. You'll probably find it more helpful,
though, if you read individual sections as you encounter
problems or develop an interest in specific aspects of
the CLR (ideal for those middle-of-the-night "I wonder
how it does..." questions). Richter typically lets his
code do most of the talking, and he'll often introduce a
section with a prose summary of the CLR way of doing
something (sometimes with a supplementary diagram)
before unleashing a string of quick examples that
illustrate variations on the theme. In an unusual and
helpful tutorial move, he makes heavy use of the ILDASM
utility to show what goes on at compile time. --David
Wall
Topics covered: How the Microsoft .NET Framework--in
other words, the Common Language Runtime (CLR) and parts
of the Framework Class Library (FCL)--runs Microsoft
.NET applications, and how to write software for the
framework. Shared assemblies, characteristics of CLR
types (including their properties, methods, fields, and
events), and object orientation all get ample coverage.
There's particularly detailed information on text
manipulation (including internationalization and
localization), arrays, custom interfaces, and the
managed environment (garbage collection) in the CLR
environment.
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