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(22 reviews)
Author: Daniel Solis
ISBN : B008KKOGMK
New from $22.99
Format: PDF, EPUB
Download books file now Free Illustrated C# 2012 for everyone book mediafire, rapishare, and mirror link
This book presents the C# 5.0 language in a uniquely succinct and visual format. Often in programming books, the information can be hidden in a vast sea of words. As a programmer who has over the years used a dozen programming languages, the author understands it can sometimes be difficult to slog through another 1,000-page book of dense text to learn a new language. There are likely many other programmers who feel the same way. To address this situation, this book explains C# 5.0 using figures; short, focused code samples; and clear, concise explanations.
Figures are of prime importance in this book. While teaching programming seminars, Daniel Solis found that he could almost watch the light bulbs going on over the students heads as he drew the figures on the whiteboard. In this text, he has distilled each important concept into simple but accurate illustrations. The visual presentation of the content will give you an understanding of C# thats not possible with text alone.
For something as intricate and precise as a programming language, however, there must be text as well as figures. But rather than long, wordy explanations, Solis has used short, concise descriptions and bulleted lists to make each important piece of information visually distinct.
By the end of this book, youll have a thorough working knowledge of all aspects of the C# language, whether youre a novice programmer or a seasoned veteran of other languages. If you want a long, leisurely, verbose explanation of the language, this is not the book for you. But if you want a concise, thorough, visual presentation of C# 5.0, this is just what youre looking for.
What youll learn
- Details of the C# 5.0 language presented in a clear, concise treatment
- New features in the latest version of .NET, version 4.5, in the authors unique visual style
- How C# differs from and is similar to other programming languages, aiding migrating C++ and VB programmers who already know how languages work
Who this book is for
- Visual Basic programmers interested in moving to C#
- C++ programmers interested in moving to C#
- Novice programmers interested in learning C#
- Students in introductory programming classes learning C#
Table of Contents
C# and the .NET Framework Overview of C# Programming Types, Storage, and Variables Classes: The Basics Methods More About Classes Classes and Inheritance Expressions and Operators Statements Structs Enumerations Arrays Delegates Events Interfaces Conversions Generics Enumerators and Iterators Introduction to LINQ Introduction to Asynchronous Programming Namespaces and Assemblies Exceptions Preprocessor Directives Reflection and Attributes Other Topics Direct download links available for Free Illustrated C# 2012 [Kindle Edition]
- File Size: 14279 KB
- Print Length: 764 pages
- Publisher: Apress; 4th edition (July 4, 2012)
- Sold by: Amazon Digital Services, Inc.
- Language: English
- ASIN: B008KKOGMK
- Text-to-Speech: Enabled
X-Ray:
- Lending: Enabled
- Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #137,015 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
- #92
in Books > Computers & Technology > Programming > Languages & Tools > C# - #93
in Kindle Store > Kindle eBooks > Computers & Technology > Programming > C & C++
- #92
in Books > Computers & Technology > Programming > Languages & Tools > C# - #93
in Kindle Store > Kindle eBooks > Computers & Technology > Programming > C & C++
Free Illustrated C# 2012
The concept for this book is great: it's a well written introductory/intermediate tour of the C# language structure and concepts, with careful attention to language nomenclature so terminology doesn't trip up new users. The author also includes significant background information, like how memory is allocated, that help build a deeper understanding of how the language works.
But as of 2/22/2013 there are still formatting problems in the Kindle reader for Android (v. 3.8.2.4), Kindle Cloud Reader (v. 1.4.0) for Google Chrome, and Kindle Reader for Windows 7 (v. 1.20.5 40382). On each platform some of the tables appear to be low-resolution graphics and are illegible. In the reader for Chrome and the native Windows 7 app the type size of some code examples is so small that the maximum text size must be selected to make them legible. Other code samples are fully justified or wrap so as to ruin the code formatting. (Some of this seems to be the result of the way in-line code comments are spaced.)
Worst of all, annotated examples of code--the core of this book's "illustrated" style--aren't properly aligned: arrows linking the annotations to the code don't line up correctly, ruining the illustration.
Figures, on the other hand, are both well designed and well executed, contributing substantially to the "illustrated" style of the work, and don't seem to be effected by conversion to digital format because they're graphics. (This would not be an acceptable solution for the code "illustrations" because the content they represent couldn't be found through a text search.) Because the figures are intended only to supplement the code illustrations, they can't substitute for the illustrations.
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