Volume I, Pragmatic Version Control, describes how to use version control as the cornerstone of a project. A project with out version control is like a word processor without an UNDO button: the more text you enter, the more expensive a mistake will be. Pragmatic Version Control shows you how to use version control systems effectively, with all the benefits and safety but without crippling bureaucracy or lengthy, tedious procedures. This volume, Pragmatic Unit Testing, is the second volume in the series. Unit testing is an essential technique as it provides real-world, real-time feedback for developers |
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Read more about this free ebooks:Pragmatic Unit Testing in C# with NUnit
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Part I: Creating Your First C# Programs - This part shows you, step by step, how to write the smallest graphical Windows application possible using the Visual Studio 2005 interface. Part I also shows you how to create the basic nongraphical C# framework that’s used in the other parts of this book. Part II: Basic C# Programming - At the most basic level, Shakespeare’s plays are just a series of words all strung together.By the same token, 90 percent of any C# program you ever write consists of creating variables, performing arithmetic operations, and controlling the execution path through a program.
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Read more about this free ebooks:C# 2005 For Dummies
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Chapter 1:What Is Client-Side Reporting? - This chapter will start with briefly discussing client-side reporting and the architecture on which it is built. Chapter 2: Client-Side Reporting Components - This chapter will raise the curtain and introduce you to the out-of-the-box local processing of Reporting Services (RS) functionality. Chapter 3:Data Models,Datasets, and the ADO.NET Interface - The purpose of this ebook is to teach you RS using real-world reporting projects; this chapter will help you understand how to use the dataset to gather data using ADO.NET |
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Read more about this free ebooks:Client-Side Reporting with Visual Studio in C Sharp
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Chapter 1, C# 3.0 and .NET 3.5 - This chapter introduces you to the C# language and the .NET 3.5 platform. Chapter 2, Getting Started: “Hello World” - This chapter demonstrates a simple program to provide a context for what follows, and introduces you to the Visual Studio integrated development environment (IDE) and a number of C# language concepts. Chapter 3, C# Language Fundamentals - This chapter presents the basics of the language, from built-in datatypes to keywords. Chapter 4, Classes and Objects - Classes define new types and allow programmers |
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Read more about this free ebooks:Programming C# 3.0 5th Edition-Covers Visual Studio 2008,LINQ,.NET 3.5 and more
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Chapter 1, Language Integrated Query (LINQ) Thischapter covers Language Integrated Query (LINQ) and itsus age with objects, ADO.NET, and XML. There are recipes using many of the Standard Query Operators and showing how to use some of the query operators that are not keywords in the language, but are still quite powerful. Chapter 2, Strings and Characters Thischapter coversboth the String and Char data types. |
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Read more about this free ebooks:C# 3.0 Cookbook 3rd Edition
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