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41. Microsoft Visual Basic Programming Projects by CEP Inc. | |
Paperback: 224
Pages
(1999-05-11)
list price: US$40.95 -- used & new: US$23.40 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0538688947 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Customer Reviews (3)
Choice of Best Bargain
database simple coding
Visual Basic Program Projects I Wish every one good luck whoever buys or uses thisbook. Your's Well wisher. Ravi kumar. ... Read more |
42. Word 2003 Visual Basic Programming by John Low | |
Paperback: 172
Pages
(2005-02-14)
list price: US$22.95 -- used & new: US$22.79 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 1411624173 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Customer Reviews (1)
Good beginning |
43. Visual Basic programming by Forest Lin | |
Unknown Binding: 618
Pages
(1996)
-- used & new: US$11.00 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 1881991431 Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
44. Visual Basic Programming by Steven Hollzner, Steven Holzner | |
Paperback: 320
Pages
(1991-09)
list price: US$29.95 Isbn: 013489295X Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description |
45. Stephens' Visual Basic Programming 24-Hour Trainer by Rod Stephens | |
Paperback: 504
Pages
(2011-02-15)
list price: US$39.99 -- used & new: US$26.39 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0470943351 Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description The book is divided into lessons that begin with a discussion of a particular concept or technique. After describing the main concept, the lesson includes a Try It section that invites the reader to perform a programming exercise to solidify the lesson's ideas. The Try It has several subsections: Goals describes the exercise so the reader knows what should happen. Hints gives pointers about possible confusing aspects of the problem if they are needed. Step-by-Step provides a numbered series of steps that show how to solve the problem. A screencast on the accompanying DVD shows the author working through the Try It problem. Additional commentary at the end of the screencast highlights extensions of the lesson's main concepts. After the Try It's Step-by-Step section, the text concludes with a series of exercises that the reader can solve for further practice and to expand the lesson's main ideas. |
46. Visual Basic Programming W/win by Douglas Hergert | |
Paperback: 472
Pages
(1991-09-13)
list price: US$44.95 Isbn: 0679790640 Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
47. Mastering Database Programming with Visual Basic 6 by Evangelos Petroutsos | |
Paperback: 896
Pages
(2000-01-04)
list price: US$39.99 -- used & new: US$17.21 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0782125980 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Customer Reviews (11)
Don't judge the book by it's cover!!
Unsatisfied I've seen better books written for teaching. THis is not a teaching book.
If you're serious, ignore this book Oh, and by the way, the examples on the CD are fiddly to get running as well.
Useful overview of db development Overall recommended. dan
Mixed emotions |
48. Programming Microsoft Visual Basic 2005: The Language (Pro Developer) by Francesco Balena 196 | |
Paperback: 990
Pages
(2006-01-25)
list price: US$59.99 -- used & new: US$10.28 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0735621837 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Customer Reviews (23)
Excellent
The Best Dot Net Framework Book Period!
How Windows XP really works.
Great VB book for serious VB Programmers.
Good Book |
49. Oracle Programming with Visual Basic by Nick Snowdon | |
Paperback: 715
Pages
(1998-10-14)
list price: US$39.99 -- used & new: US$33.99 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0782123228 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Next, the author devotes a section to implementing VisualBasic client applications against the Oracle back end. He presentsOpen Database Connectivity (ODBC), cursors, and object linking andembedding database (OLE-DB) as well as discusses the Microsoft JETengine, remote data objects, and ODBCDirect. All of thesearchitectures are critical to expert database programming in VisualBasic. The book also addresses other client design issues, such astransaction control and error handling. Oracle Programmingwraps up with a section on advanced Oracle techniques that includesOracle Objects for OLE--otherwise known as OO4O. Generous but concisecode examples, smart sidebars on real-world implementation, and plentyof architectural diagrams round out this book. --Stephen Plain Customer Reviews (21)
A little Misleading
Oracle Demystified, Not Just For VB Programmers I recommend this book to everyone who must use Oracle.The first 10 chapters summarize Oracle better then Oracle summarizes Oracle.Snowdon assumes that the reader is familiar with SQL Server, but he does not assume ANY Oracle knowledge.By the time this book was available I had already written two production class programs for Oracle without the benefit of experienced Oracle DBA's to help me. This book would have saved me hours of frustration had it been available. I have just purchased Dov Trietsch's, "Visual Basic Oracle 8 Programmer's Reference," so I cannot compare the two. If you are going to survive in an Oracle environment, you will need to learn PL/SQL, Oracle's extended SQL programming language for triggers and stored procedures.Snowdon has an excellent introduction, but the definitive source is Steven Feurerstein's "Oracle PL/SQL Programming" by O'Reilly and Associates.I DO NOT recommend any of the Osborne books on Oracle, even though they are Oracle's vendor of choice.Oracle makes a big chunk of its money in consulting fees and, in my opinion, the Osborne documentation protects that revenue stream.
Heavy in Theory, Better Examples Elsewhere The first 6 chapters, 210 pages, are dedicated to Oracle architecture and administrative tasks, such as deploying an Oracle db.In my opinion, if you're programming you may need to know about 10 pages worth of this info, good luck finding it, and if you're doing dba work on an enterprise server watch out if you've only read these 200 pages. Then, when it comes to actual programming an app against Oracle the book also falls way short of the wrox title.There is not a single example in the book that actually demostrates how to create a FORM (remember those?) that links to Oracle.Published in 1999 the code is also behind, with large sections of the book dedicated to DAO, RDO, and ODBC Direct.And, as others have stated, the code describing the use of stored procedures is either wrong or out of date. If you want to read a long book, get this one.There are some good, clear descriptions of the theory behind cursors and the mechanics of the various middleware connection layers.If you actually want to develop against Oracle, get the wrox book!
Oracle, VB, and Rock Stardom As a final remark let me addthat Oracle developers with VB skills (or vice versa, yet again) arecapable of commanding large salaries or hourly rates.This is youropportunity as a computer geek to get the recognition you deserve and tolive like a rock star. Order yours now!
One of the best how-to's I've ever read. |
50. Visual Basic Graphics Programming by Rod Stephens | |
Paperback: 677
Pages
(1997-03)
list price: US$49.99 -- used & new: US$85.40 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0471155330 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description You'll needto understand VB basics before picking up Visual Basic GraphicsProgramming, but the book's clear writing style and measured pacewill help you master these relatively arcane subjects and add powerfulgraphics features to your programs. The book begins with a quickbrush-up on standard Visual Basic graphics features such as coordinatesystems, graphics objects, and calls to Windows graphics applicationprogramming interfaces (APIs), but quickly moves on to a broadspectrum of bitmap- and vector-oriented topics. The world may notneed another Photoshop or AutoCAD written in VB, but if any aspect ofyour program could benefit from the addition of complexgraphics--possibilities include anything from an enhanced interface todata visualization--this book can show you how it's done. VisualBasic Graphics Programming also serves as a fine introduction tomany classic graphics techniques that are more traditionally presentedin C. The bundled CD includes all code examples from the book as wellas a large library of useful graphics functions and procedures. Customer Reviews (16)
It sounds good, but when the codes do not work
Well-Done Stephens!
Excellent reference
Rod Stephens is a very good teacher for an apt student RodStephens has a great style of teaching and this is only the first book Ibought by him three years ago.All his other books are very useful. However as another critic here said the code it not in ready to run formfor other applications.If you are an apt student and programmer theconversion is not difficult. This is a teaching book, building complexclass function libraries was not it's goal.You will have tons of fun withthis book and all his others.
thank you...thank you...thank you ....but! But I have twocomments about this book : 1- All examples in the book are not designed tosupport the JPEG,GIF image format, when the book work in VB5 . 2- Someexamples not working and giving this message "This monitor does not supportpalettes.". But again I can say thank you and I'm happy to have this bookin my computer library. ... Read more |
51. Windows Game Programming with Visual Basic and DirectX (With CD-ROM) by Wayne S. Freeze | |
Paperback: 396
Pages
(2001-12-15)
list price: US$49.99 -- used & new: US$29.67 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: B000C4SKWE Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Windows Game Programming with Visual Basic and DirectX is the only game programming book on the market that pairs the ease of Visual Basic with the power and flash of DirectX applications.The book is written to teach the skills and thoughts behind game programming, with hands-on examples and a simulation game project that results in a complete application at the end of the book. Topics such as artificial intelligence, animation, sound effects, background music, and multiplayer setups will be covered in detail and put to work in the hands-on game project. Although this book relies on the older VB6 standard and makes no mention of Microsoft's new VB .NET, the text really focuses on the DirectX API, the foundation of graphics and gaming on the Windows platform. The author walks the reader through the steps required to design and code a game, from defining features to designing 2-D and 3-D artwork to implementing a computer simulation in code. There's good coverage of 3-D content design with the Caligari trueSpace design tool, which is used to design virtual scenes. Freeze's sample game for a virtual mall starts out simply with basic 3-D rendering and introduces features like user input, music, and sound in subsequent chapters. Besides giving a tour of essential DirectX APIs like Direct3D, DirectInput, and DirectSound, the author also provides background material on game design concepts like random numbers, simulations (used extensively in computing today), and finite state machines. The heart of this text shows off the design choices made in the author's own case study. By the end, his virtual mall is enhanced with moving customers, special "cheat codes," and even a popup newsletter that displays game state. Though certainly not the most action-oriented game you're likely to see, the virtual mall shows off the power of computer game simulations (like SimCity) to good effect and also provides an approachable example for getting you started on your own creations. Game programming is legendarily difficult and extremely challenging. This title fills a useful niche by providing an accessible and entertaining introduction to game development without getting bogged down in extensive math (or gnarly DirectX APIs). It's a worthwhile choice for getting started with games and graphics in Windows and VB. --Richard Dragan Topics covered: Introduction to game design (including technical features, user interactions, cheat codes, and "Easter eggs"), DirectX services, 2-D and 3-D graphics quick-start tutorial (including rendering basic Direct3D scenes), graphical content design with Caligari trueSpace and Adobe PhotoShop and Illustrator, texture mappings, saving and loading game state, 3-D rendering techniques, random-number-generation techniques, programming strategies for computer simulations (including multiple servers and queues), custom VB6 code for a simulation framework, case study for a virtual mall (including simulated stores, customers, and money), user input with DirectInput, adding game commands, background music and sound effects with DirectSound and DirectMusic, editing WAV files, game maps, finite state machines, saving and loading games, and adding features for more playability. Customer Reviews (16)
Too superficial
Explanation is not so good
worth its weight in gold However, it's not without its faults. One thing to remember though is that you will need to refer to the cd, because the author cut the size of the book by only showing the relevant portions of the code to the topic in the book not the whole picture. However since the code makes use of a debug log you can't run the code from off a cd. You need to copy it to a space on your hard drive first and then open it in vb and run it. Lastly the modeling package featured in the book seems to be another me too product.
Good, but better with add-ons. First and foremost, a warning. Freeze's book, despite its publication date, deals exclusively in Visual Basic 6. If you're using VB.NET, a lot of this stuff is going to cause you to wonder what on earth Freeze is on about. I strongly suggest reading Keith Sink's DirectX 8 and Visual Basic Development in conjunction with this, and asking a lot of questions on a lot of VB.NET tech support mailing lists. (Microsoft's documentation on how to go from VB6-VB.NET with DirectX is not nonexistent, but it is such that nonexistent would have been better.) Given that .NET had already been in prerelease for over a year by this book's publication, one would think that, at the very least, the publisher would have made it very plain somewhere on the cover that the book dealt in a technology that's not compatible with the next generation of the language. An unforgivable oversight, especially if you happen to spend the full retail price for a copy of this book. That aside, Freeze's book is quite good in the way it introduces the reader to the new, and largely esoteric, combination of Visual Basic and DirectX (the latter technology was exclusively the realm of C++ programmers until 2001, when DX8 began to include VB wrappers). He's not afraid to use repetition to get his point across, and he does so in a laid-back atmosphere that's quite different from what one sees in most how-to programming manuals. Freeze teaches the VB/DX intersection through the programming of a SimCity-style games called SwimMall, which is in and of itself at least worth a discounted copy of the book. Needless to say it's not a commercial-quality game, as one would expect from a single person programming such a thing while under the pressure of a book deadline. But the routines and ideas therein are just the thing to spark the imaginations of novice game programmers; no matter what genre a person is working in, there are certainly routines here that will help a programmer out in various ways. Much of this code is easily ported to any other type of game framework. Very good stuff. Just remember the admonition in the first paragraph if you're working with .NET and haven't used VB before. (Actually, I recommend Sink in conjunction with this book anyway; the atmospheres of the two are a pleasant mesh, and when you can't find a niggling piece of information you need in one, the other is sure to have it.) *** ½
A great book for all |
52. Advanced Programming Using Visual Basic 2008 by Julia Case Bradley, Anita Millspaugh | |
Paperback: 672
Pages
(2009-01-13)
-- used & new: US$69.24 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0073517224 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Customer Reviews (6)
Good
What were they authors thinking?
This is the first textbook I will NOT keep after class is done
Good Service
Bad book, Dont buy! |
53. Programming Visual Basic .NET, 2nd Edition by Jesse Liberty | |
Paperback: 800
Pages
(2003-04-01)
list price: US$39.95 -- used & new: US$8.86 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0596004389 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Customer Reviews (9)
Great book for an overview of Visual Basic .Net
kind of disappointing
Good book to start with VB but don't expect anything more ! WHY GOOD - It is a great introduction to VB.Net for experienced programmers (experienced with VB6 or other programming language). The fundamentals of the language cosntruct (like the usual If clause, While loop etc.) are nicely condensed into one single chapter (Ch 3). Every chapter in Part-1 of the book explains one or more related language concepts in an easy to understand manner. Until the end of Part-1, all the code examples can be done using Notepad and compiled with the Visual Basic command line compiler (You do NOT even need Visual Studio.Net !). This is very good since it focuses on learning the language concepts rather than forcing you to get familiar with a strange IDE if you have not used Visual Studio before. Though there are some obvious errors in the code samples in Arrays and Strings chapter, they are no showstoppers in understanding the underlying concepts. Overall the part-1 of this book helps you to get upto speed on VB.Net very quickly. I did not read Part-3 yet, but I expect the treatment to be similar to Part-1, since Part-3 also deals with more theoritical aspects like Part-1. WHY BAD - I read every page of this book until Part-1 but Part-2, where each chapter deals with things like Window forms/Ado.Net/Web forms (which themselves are separate books on the market), can be very intimidating as the author tries to cover a lot of ground in a very short space. For example, the code example in Chapter-13 for Windows forms, is gargantuan for a first time Winform program to be developed in Visual Studio.Net. Moreover, the code download from the author's website is also not of much use since the author had hidden some code to save space in the book and uploaded the same thing in his website also ! Overall, a good starting point to get into VB.Net but don't expect to learn everything about .Net with this book alone ! If you are already into VB.Net and looking to learn more about ADO.Net or Web forms, then this book is definitely NOT for you !
Need more content
C# programmer learns by code sample The only problem I really have with the examples is that it did not make clear what code was part of VisualBasic interop.Since I am now coding in two .NET languages, I don't want to have to remember CInt for one language and Convert.ToInt32 for another.I know this book is geared toward experienced VB6 programmers, but let's start doing things the .NET way.That's why it's here. ... Read more |
54. Learn Programming and Visual Basic 2.0 With John Socha by John Socha | |
Hardcover: 500
Pages
(1992-11)
list price: US$29.95 Isbn: 0782112153 Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description |
55. Programming Visual Basic for the Palm OS (O'Reilly Palm) by Matthew Holmes, Patrick Burton, Roger Knoell | |
Paperback: 432
Pages
(2002-04-16)
list price: US$39.95 -- used & new: US$5.47 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0596002009 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Customer Reviews (4)
Good book As an aside, I am not sure if the previous reviewer actually read the book or tried to run the code. There are very few typos in the chapter mentioned (which is online) and I didn't see any errors. For me, the code worked fine; the book specifically mentions VB6 and service pack 3.
A highly recommended self-teaching tool
Not much help for Conduit development
Conduit Coverage I bought the book specifically to build conduits and this left me only 50% satisfied. ... Read more |
56. Programming Visual Basic .NET by Dave Grundgeiger | |
Paperback: 446
Pages
(2001-12-15)
list price: US$39.95 -- used & new: US$12.50 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0596000936 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description This title's compact format has to be one of its most appealing features. After covering the basics of what's new in VB .NET, the author digs in with a fast-moving, authoritative tour of all essential language features in the new version. This language tutorial really shines as it covers topics such as basic language statements, data types, and variables and defining classes using properties, methods, and inheritance (and more advanced bells and whistles). Short code excerpts illustrate just how to program quickly, and many readers will find this material useful as a reference for day-to-day questions about specific language features as they come up in real projects. Of course, .NET has a brand-new set of APIs too. The author concentrates on basic Windows Forms and Web forms programming. The section on basic database ADO.NET (including bound controls) is a standout and will get you started with these essential programming APIs. Coverage of Web services will put using this new approach to building distributed systems within reach of many readers. (Here, the author provides some advice for creating effective distributed Web services.) By focusing first on the language itself, this book will help virtually anyone get started with the latest version of Microsoft's most popular programming language without getting bogged down in the many details of the .NET platform. With plenty of detail for the expert, yet entirely approachable for the beginner, this title will serve both as a reference and a tutorial for getting onboard with this new version. It provides a valuable and timely resource for the aspiring VB .NET developer. --Richard Dragan Topics covered: Introduction to the .NET framework and Visual Basic; in-depth tutorial to VB .NET (including keywords, data types, operators, and expressions, classes, interfaces, exception handling, delegates and events); the Common Language Infrastructure (CLI), the Common Type System (CTS), garbage collection, overview of built-in .NET namespaces; Windows Forms, building MDI applications, basic graphics programming with GDI+, using common controls, menus, event handling, basic Web development with VB .NET (server controls, validation, maintaining state and application-level settings); creating custom controls, Web services (including WSDL and discovery), ADO.NET database programming (SQL Server and OLE DB APIs compared, the DataSet and DataReader classes, grid controls); references to .NET attributes, exceptions, and math functions. Customer Reviews (6)
Excellent Introduction to core .NET topics
An Excellent VB.NET Guide and Reference The later chapters are similarly well presented and explain the important aspects of additional technologies of the .NET Platform that are central to successful application development.The chapter on ASP.NET does a great job of explaining user controls, form validation, and security in ASP.NET.I've found this information critical in designing solutions that target the web.While the chapter on ADO.NET is perhaps not as comprehensive as the rest, I found the information to be quite helpful and informative enough to implement complete data access solutions.Similarly, the chapter on programming web services in VB.NET has been a great help in understanding how web services function, and their importance in communications across the internet. Overall I find this book to be a great introduction to the Visual Basic .NET language itself, as well as a great tool for understanding how to use Visual Basic .NET to harness many of the exciting features of the .NET platform.
Great Comprehensive Book The second chapter in the book, "The Visual Basic .NET Language" was particularly helpful with an in-depth view of the VB.NET language constructs and keywords.The third chapter explains the .NET CLR, assemblies, garbage collection and other concepts new to .NET very clearly. This book is excellent for programmers moving from classic VB to VB.NET, people new to the VB.NET language, and as a language reference for more advanced users.
Good book...not great The chapter on ASP.NET is well organized, and everyone interested in using ASP.NET will learn something.There is a great section on data validation and a clear explanation on how to use the Application, Session, and Cookie objects.ASP developers should have little trouble ramping up to ASP.NET quickly.Be aware that the coverage of ADO.NET is sketchy at best. All in all, Programming Visual Basic .NET is a good book.Not the best book you'll ever read on the subject, but a good beginning level book.If you've every had any experience with Visual Basic or ASP, most of the examples will be very easy to pick up on.However, you'll want to pick up at least one additional book to cover some of the gaps left by this book.
Clear, comprehensive guide |
57. Programming Visual Basic .NET with Student CD by Julia Case Bradley, Anita C. Millspaugh | |
Paperback:
Pages
(2002-07-29)
list price: US$74.95 -- used & new: US$18.57 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0072559985 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Customer Reviews (6)
This book was also used in a college course I had...
Not good for online classes If you've programmed before, then this book might be okay; if not---don't attempt to learn with this one.
Hard to follow
A Visual Tutorial for a Visual Language This book is one such guide, and does its job as well as a book can. However, even that is not enough to make learning VB.Net painless. There are so many diagrams in the book that it ultimately ends up being long and tedious. But I don't fault the book, as it's the best I've ever seen for this type of subject. It's just that a book can't do justice for the language as well as a classroom. For self-study, I would recommend not a book but a CBT (computer-based training) course. Instead of making the student wade through pages and pages of screenshots, a CBT course animates the process of creating a program, and tests him or her at key points along the way. However, CBT courses aren't cheap. As a paper alternative, this is the only book I could recommend for the beginning Visual Basic student.
Used in college course |
58. Learn Programming and Visual Basic by John Socha | |
Paperback: 500
Pages
(1992-09)
list price: US$29.92 Isbn: 0782110576 Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description |
59. Sams Teach Yourself Game Programming with Visual Basic in 21 Days (Teach YourselfDays) by Clayton Walnum | |
Paperback: 696
Pages
(2000-12-04)
list price: US$39.99 -- used & new: US$19.94 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 067231987X Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Sams Teach Yourself Game Programming with Visual Basic in 21 Days teaches the reader the art of game programming from the ground up. The reader is assumed to have basic programming knowledge that he wishes to apply to the creation of basic games. Upon completion of the book readers will have learned to build eight games including card games, puzzles, and strategy games, each focusing on a specific task and building the reader's knowledge and skill level. The final week is a culmination of the skills learned in the first two weeks where the reader builds a complete game incorporating sound, animation, etc. Customer Reviews (23)
A good book to get the juices flowing
Good Overall Game Examples For Any Language
Good Book For beginners
Good Beginner's Book and that is it.
A must have for any one wanting to program games |
60. Database Programming with Visual Basic .NET, Second Edition by Carsten Thomsen | |
Paperback: 959
Pages
(2002-10-04)
list price: US$59.95 -- used & new: US$7.50 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 1590590325 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Take your pick: you may either read this book cover-to-cover, or just refer to it when you want ready-made solutions of "drop-in" code. Either way, Database Programming with Visual Basic .NET, Second Edition will teach you to master ADO.NET programmatically and from within the VS. NET IDE. You will learn the concepts of disconnected data access with ADO.NET. You'll also learn to create tables, constraints, projects, stored procedures, views, and triggers. The book will explain how to use SQLXML 3.0 with SQL Server 2000, and how to incorporate message queuing into applications using MSMQ 3.0. Author Carsten Thomsen, a recognized Microsoft MVP, carries over one of the most popular features from the first edition: the real-world sample application that he built throughout. With this example code, you can connect to SQL Server from your choices of SQL Server .NET Data Provider, OLE DB .NET Data Provider, or ODBC .NET Data Provider. Exchange Server 2000 data manipulation is also covered, with original working code. Customer Reviews (46)
nive work My favorite chapter is 19 and if you need a book that teaches you about database programming with VB .net and ADO.netb then this book is for you.
Good and detailed book
Neat and tidy
Good precise writing
Yes, this is the book I have been looking for |
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