See larger picture | ASP.NET Professional Projects
by
Hersh Bhasin
- Muska & Lipman/Premier-TradePrice at Amazon.com: $49.99Availability:
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- Average Customer Review:
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- Amazon.com Sales Rank: 485333
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Product Description This book offers intermediate to advanced IT professionals the chance to learn the inner workings of new SOAP/XML developments by working through a real-life application. Readers will design an accounting product for the Web using ASP .NET and Web Services. The application can be written in any .NET language and all communication is over the Internet. Readers will walk away feeling confident about developing real-life projects using ASP .NET.
Featured Customer Reviews One of my open-on-table books,
September 21, 2006 I never write reviews, but this is an ex.Message :-)
The most helpful part of this book is author's business and architectural approaches.
There are some bugs in the code-examples, but!
Even if you're not experienced developer you can find and fix them.
More you can take it as sudoku puzzles.
Only one thing I would consider as a pros - is an examples based on the OLEDB non-SQL provider, which is little bit outdated, for small and medium-size companies.
Book is especially helpful for developers who specialized on the in-house extranet applications.
With the Best Regards to Author!
Unsupported and Outdated?,
December 31, 2003 I got this book mainly to reuse the GenEditAdd component described in it. However, it seems that the book is totally unsupported now. The author's web site has not been updated recently. The versions of the source code available from the author and the publisher are different, and at least one of those versions appears to be based on a .NET beta. The author's contact email address does not seem to be working. Neither does the contact form on his website. Ok, but...,
March 14, 2003 The writing style is great and his projects are pretty well thought out. However, I have to downgrade my rating of this book because: 1) Appears to be based on an early beta. 2) Most of his coding examples produce poorly structure html. To borrow a phrase from the xhtml/xml world, it is not "well formed." In other words, it doesn't follow accepted w3 standards. 3) His use of CSS is just flat out not right. good book,
February 21, 2003 ~Part I - The ASP.NET Programming Environment Chapter 1 - Introducing ASP.NET Chapter 2 - Introducing ASP.NET Web Forms and Controls Chapter 3 - Using ADO.NET in the .NET Framework Chapter 4 - Data Binding Chapter 5 - Input Validation Chapter 6 - User Controls Chapter 7 - Custom Controls Chapter 8 - Business Objectives Chapter 9 - Working with ASP.NET Web Services Chapter 10 - ASP.NET Applications Chapter 11 - Caching Chapter 12 - Tracing Chapter 13 - SecurityPart II - Projects ~Project 1 - A Personal Finance Manager Chapter 14 - The Design of the Personal Finance Manager Chapter 15 - Chart of Accounts Chapter 16 - Transactions Chapter 17 - The Trial Balance Report Project 2 - Web Services Chapter 18 - Creating a Generic Database Web Service Chapter 19 - Designing a Navigation System Chapter 20 - Incorporating Web Services in the Chart Chapter 21 - Incorporating Web Services in the Chart of Accounts Form Chapter 22 - Incorporating Web Services in the~~~ Trial Balance Project 3 - Inventory Management System Chapter 23 - The Design of the Inventory Management System Chapter 24 - Inventory Masters Chapter 25 - Inventory Movements Chapter 26 - The Inventory Balances Report Project 4 - The GenEditAdd Control Chapter 27 - Using the GenAdd Control Chapter 28 - Extending the GenEditAdd Control Project 5 - Visual Studio.NET Chapter 29 - Displaying Database Data Using a Strongly-Typed DataSet Chapter 30 - Writing CRUD Applications with~~ Visual Studio.NET Chapter 31 - Creating a Web Service Using Visual Studio.NET Part III - Appendixes Appendix A: Installing the Sample Database Appendix B: HailStormIndex~ Great real world examples,
June 11, 2002 The author's ADO chapter was excellent. I found the entire book to be a great source with well thought out examples. I have 6 other ASP.net books, and I highly reccomend this one.
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