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Paperback Beginning C# Objects: From Concepts to Code Book

ISBN: 159059360X

ISBN13: 9781590593608

Beginning C# Objects: From Concepts to Code

Beginning C# Objects: From Concepts to Code is a comprehensive, yet approachable guide for anyone interested in learning the C# language, beginning with the basics. To begin, this book addresses the... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Recommended

Format: Paperback

Condition: Good

$9.29
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Customer Reviews

5 ratings

an extremely useful book

This is an extremely useful book. The concepts are clearly explained at every stage. I think the authors know their subjects well and also how to impart their knowledge to others. I really thank these two guys for a well written book. Concepts I did'nt know before were clearly explained; those that I knew took on new meaning through their simple but refreshing approach. Other technical writers can learn a thing or two from the authors about the art of writing. This book will remain in my library for some time to come. I will be on the lookout for other titles from these two guys.

Excellent book

Indeed an excellent book. I paid over twice the cost of the book for an online course on object modelling and the calibre of this book is far superior. The detail of the highlights of this book have already been covered by other reviewers. My $0.02 - it would be great if the author could publish suggested solutions to the exercises on her website. May I venture to suggest even vetting solutions sent in by readers(that may save you the time and effort), or even a group on yahoo for this purpose - heck, here it is - http://groups.yahoo.com/group/CSharp_OO

Object-Oriented C# Excellence!

I have been writing very poor C# applications for 3 years. I bought a copy of Beginning C# Objects because I wanted to learn to take advantage of all of the object oriented features of C# without having to slog through excessive examples of object-oriented theory or have to translate object-oriented lessons from other languages such as C++ or Java into C#. This book was everything I hoped it would be. This book carries over knowledge imparted in Beginning Java Objects (Jacquie Barker Apress 2003) spending equal time discussing object-oriented theory as well as C# implementation. While most programming books rely on the reader to "read between the lines" of code examples to explain complex theory this book excels at providing clear easy-to-read well written explanations. I especially liked the first part of the book with discussion of objects and classes, object interactions and the relationship between objects including the distinguishing features of object-oriented programming languages with relation to C#.

Look no further, people!

For years I suffered from confusion regarding general object-oriented methodology. I'd read books that dealt with the syntax of object-oriented features, but none of these books dealt with the big picture of object-oriented architecture. They take you through the first steps ("this is how you define a class...", "this is how one class inherits from another...", etc) but none of them dealt with the next logical phase of learning; i.e. how do you "do" object-orientation in your software? In addition to that glaring deficiency, many of the books were difficult to read, being a tad bit academic and on the dry side...and some were completely dehydrated! Imagine my surprise when I happened upon this book. Without a doubt this was everything I needed in a book like this. Very well written with a refreshingingly informal style, the book starts out explaining C#'s syntax and powerful features. From the very beginning of the book the authors tie-in what you're learning with a case study of how to design and implement a system with a modestly complex internal data structure (a student registration system for university courses). Examples are very clear, there are plenty of nice little nuggets of advice (things that you should get in the habit of doing) and most importantly WHY you should do these things (backed up with brief, easy to understand code). Read this book from beginning to end. Then, read it again. It's very easy reading and won't take long to get through, especially if you're familiar with many object-oriented principles. I think you'll find yourself having many "AHA!" moments when reading. You'll be on your way to being a fully competant software architect ready to take on big projects with confidence. I only wish I had a book like this 5 years ago.

GREAT BOOK!

This is an outstanding book on C# objects! The book is broken into three parts. Part One gives you the ABC?s of objects. Part Two discusses object modeling. Part Three translates a UML ?Blueprint? into C# code. Part One is by far the best section in the book. I can honestly say I understand basic C# syntax and how objects are applied in C#. It flows very smoothly and makes learning C# very easy. Part Two is a good introduction to UML. If you want to get into architecture, this is a good start but you will definitely more. Part Three takes the ?blueprint? that was built in Part Two and builds the application. The first chapter of Part Three is over 100 pages of a more advanced looked at C#. Chapter 15 goes into file persistence. It was nicely laid out but I wish they had used a database instead of ASCII files. Chapter 16 ties the GUI to the business object. Personally, I think this chapter should have had a little more meat. This book definitely gets 5 stars and if anyone ever tells me they don?t understand OOP or C#, I will tell them to read this book.
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