
Visual Basic.NET
Programmer's Reference
Dan Rahmel(Author)
Osborne/McGraw-Hill (Publisher)
3rd Edition
Published on 26. December 2001
Book
Paperback/Softback
432 pages
978-0-07-219534-7 (ISBN)
Description
Visual Basic.NET includes a host of new features that enable developers to maximize their productivity. In addition to a new unified IDE (integrated development environment) VB developers can take advantage of the new server explorer to easily integrate server-side components into their applications, the shared task list to help organize code, dynamic help for instant access to pertinent information, and macros to customize, extend and integrate the Visual Studio environment. Visual Basic.NET delivers on all of the top requests heard from developers over the past few years. This includes first-class object oriented constructs such as implementation inheritance and structured exception handling as well as power features such as free threading. In addition, new graphical designers for developing Windows and Web applications as well as for working with XML and serverside components will make VB developers more versatile than they've ever been in the past.
More details
Series
Edition
3rd ed.
Language
English
Place of publication
New York
United States
Publishing group
McGraw-Hill Education - Europe
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Illustrations
1
Dimensions
Height: 21 mm
Width: 14 mm
Thickness: 3 mm
Weight
490 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-07-219534-7 (9780072195347)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Dan Rahmel (Encinitas, CA) is a Windows programmer with more than 14 years of experience designing and implementing information systems and deploying mid-sized client/server solutions using Visual Basic, ASP, C++, and Visual FoxPro. He has authored numerous books including both editions of Visual Basic 6 Programmer's Reference, Building Web Database Applications with Visual Studio, Teach Yourself Database Programming in 24 Hours, and Developing Client-Server Applications with Visual Basic. He is a contributor to DBMS, Internet Advisor, and American Programmer magazines.
Content
Part I: Overview of Visual Basic.NET; Ch. 1: New Visual Basic.NET Elements; Ch. 2: Development System; Ch. 3: New Variable Types and Default Arguments; Ch. 4: Late Binding; Ch. 5: Eight New Application-types; Ch. 5: Application-type Approach Checklist; Ch. 6: Structured Error Handling; Ch. 7: Object-oriented Support; Part II: Programming System Information and How-To Examples; Ch. 8: ASCII Chart; Ch. 9: Hungarian Notation; Ch. 10: How-To Code Examples; Ch. 11: XML; Part III: Language Reference; Ch. 12: Core Glossary of Terms; Part IV: Object Model Diagrams; Ch. 13: NET Framework objects; Ch. 14: ADO+; Ch. 15: Excel; Ch. 16: Word; Ch. 17: Outlook; Ch. 18: Internet Explorer/DHTML; Ch. 19: Active Server Pages (ASP)