Chapter 2, Getting Started with F# and .NET, begins by introducing F# Interactive, a tool you can use to interactively evaluate F# expressions and declarations and that we encourage you to use while reading this book. Chapter 3, Introducing Functional Programming, focuses on the basic constructs of typed functional programming, including arithmetic and string primitives, type inference, tuples, lists, options, function values, aggregate operators, recursive functions, function pipelines, function compositions, pattern matching, sequences, and some simple examples of type definitions.
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Read more about this free ebooks:Expert F# (Expert’s Voice in .Net)
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Service Oriented Architecture has the potential to be the next great paradigm that will once and for all change computing as we know it. The main promise of Service Oriented Architecture is that business systems can be used by anyone, from anywhere, at any time and on any system. The popularity in Service Oriented Architecture is largely generated by the ability to allow developers to seamlessly integrate disparate systems without the requirement to understand the underlying technology specific details. |
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Read more about this free ebooks:The Complete Reference to Professional SOA with VS 2005 (C# & VB 2005) .NET 3.0
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This book serves as a comprehensive and sensible guide to the enterprise system management facilities, available as part of the Framework Class Library (FCL) of the .NET Framework.
.NET System Management Services is a detailed and practical overview of the enterprise system management facilities, available as part of the Framework Class Library (FCL) of the .NET Framework. While Windows Management Instrumentation (WMI), which is a centerpiece of Microsoft's enterprise management technology, |
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Read more about this free ebooks:.NET System Management Services
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The title of this book may seem odd; you probably already know how to write code in .NET. But you can always benefit from knowing more. Coders, architects, and developers always strive to do their best, and if given the choice to do something correctly or incorrectly they will do it correctly. So why do we have so many bugs in our code? I could say, “Heck, it’s all the managers making bonehead decisions.” It would be a popular answer, but it would not be fair. We have bugs because humans and the communication between humans are imperfect.
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Read more about this free ebooks:How to Code .NET
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Chapter 1 introduces DotNetNuke (DNN) and discusses the meaning and purpose of web portals, and the common aspects of successful web portals. It looks at different types of open-source web portals, and discusses why we selected DotNetNuke for this book. We then meet our fictional client Coffee Connections and, using user stories, gather the requirements needed to build this client's site. In Chapter 2 we see how to install a local version of DotNetNuke with Microsoft SQL Server and SQL Server 2005 Express, and cover setting the required permissions on your machine to run DNN properly. |
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Read more about this free ebooks:Building Websites with VB.NET and .NetNuke 4
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