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April 30, 2005
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Ado.Net and System XML V. 2.0: The Beta Version
Alex Homer, Dave Sussman and Mark Fussell (Addison-Wesley)
Craig Murphy writes: This book previews and explains the features of the new
versions of ADO.NET and System.Xml, based on the Beta release. It includes
asynchronous commands and multiple active results sets, SQL Server 2005
integration, the universal query architecture, plus the enhancements to the
DataSet, XPathDocument, the new XQuery support, and more.
If you have enjoyed some success with .NET 1.1 and you are now planning a
.NET/XML project and intend to use .NET 2.0, I can strongly recommend this
book as a great introduction to the salient points: the narrative is there,
but has not been padded out. This book is clearly targeted at a developer
audience, particularly an audience with some .NET 1.0 or 1.1 exposure and a
moderate amount of XML awareness.
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Feb 25, 2005
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Programming C#, Fourth Edition
Jesse Liberty (O'Reilly)
"I think this is probably the best book for both non-OO and OO programmers
to pick up, who want to start learning C# and .NET application development.
After reading this book...I finally have a proper
understanding of the fundamentals of object-oriented programming. So for all
those programmers who have been thinking about .NET for the last few years
but just haven't gotten around to learning it, this book is probably the
best place to start.- Nathanael Boehm, Canberra Macromedia Users Group
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Jan 11, 2005
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Learning Windows Server 2003
Jonathan Hassell (O'Reilly)
Hassell's new book sets out to explain Windows Server 2003 with just enough
theory to help readers grasp how different features and systems work in this
particular version. At 600 pages, "Learning Windows Server 2003" documents
the complexities of this server clearly with a focused, hands-on approach to
installing, configuring, securing, and managing the OS, either as a
stand-alone server or part of a multi-site, multi-server network. "I want
them to come away with a firm understanding of what's happening under the
hood without the sense that they're taking a graduate course in OS theory,"
Hassell explains. "Most of all, I want this to be a practical guide that
helps them get their work done: 'here's how it works, here's how to do it.'"
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April 2003
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Shared Source CLI Essentials
David Stutz, Ted Neward, Geoff Shilling (O'Reilly)
Brian Long's synopsis: A guided tour of some of the key parts of the source from the developers
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Nov 2002
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Essential .NET Volume 1 - The Common Language Runtime
Don Box, Chris Sells (Addison Wesley)
Brian Long's synopsis: CLR internal operations manual, very low level detail, told from the inside
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March 2002
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.NET Framework Essentials (2nd edition)
Thuan Thai and Hoang Lam
An objective, concise, and technical overview of the new Microsoft .NET framework for developing Web applications and services.
Specifically written for intermediate to advanced VB, C/C++, Java, and Delphi developers, ".NET Framework Essentials" should also be useful to system architects and leaders who are assessing tools for future projects.
The authors devote special attention to the writing of .NET components plus Web applications and services.
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Feb 2002
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.NET and COM - The Complete Interoperability Guide
A. Nathan (SAMS)
Brian Long's synopsis: everything you always wanted to know about COM Interop and P/Invoke (and lots you didn't)
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Feb 2002
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Inside Microsoft .NET IL Assembler
Serge Lidin (Microsoft Press)
Brian Long's synopsis: Full coverage of CIL (or MSIL) by the author of ILASM, ILDASM & the CLR Metadata validation
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Jan 2002
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Applied Microsoft .NET Framework Programming
J Richter (Microsoft Press)
Aimed at experienced developers and designers, explains the structure, functions, and operational components of Microsoft's .NET framework.
Brian Long's synopsis: framework operations manual, low level detail
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Other recommended .NET books (see The Developers Magazine for more details):
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