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Learning C# 2005: Get Started with C# 2.0 and .NET Programming (2nd Edition) |
Author: Jesse Liberty
Published: 2006-02-21 |
List price: $39.99
Our price: $26.39
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As of: December 04th, 2008 12:19:28 AM
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Customer comments on this selection.
HITS THE MARK! I find the book to be very well thought out and is a great intro to the C# language. I'm certified in Java2 but have spent the VAST majority of my career working with COBOL and other legacy languages. For me, Learning C# 2005 is a great introduction.
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br /I have a couple of other more recent books but I find that I refer to "Learning" most of the time as the more advanced books don't cover the topics that are challenging me. I would highly recommend this book to any beginning C# programmers.
A Perfect Starting Point for OO This is one of my top tech books, and I've passed along / recommended it more than once. Keep in mind that title: "Learning". This will not carry you end-to-end through C#, nor will it be the all-encompassing reference for the C# programmer who wants to keep up to speed. Instead, the audience is the new programmer, or the procedural programmer new to OO. When I think back to my first introduction to OO (a Java 1.0 boot-camp-styled course that made my brain spin in its casing), I wish I'd had this book: it's nicely paced, it begins at the beginning, and it gets you on your feet in regards to knowing how to program in the language.
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br /Note that this review is for this edition of the book, but newer editions have since been released. I still recommend the book, and its approach, to anyone new to OO in general or C# in particular. Get started here, then dig deeper with the Bible-sized tomes if you need.
Not as good as I expected... I've read the high reviews for this book that's why I bought one, but eventually got disappointed with the lack of depth on explanations esp.regarding OOP. I suggest that beginners get a different learning reference. Jeffrey Suddeth's book is compact yet organized and topics are well-explained, but you must supplement that with other books as well.My experience is, you won't learn so many things in just one book, you need 2 or 3 while learning. I have yet to review Andrew Troelsen's book which is forthcoming. If you happen to find one that explains in detail the important topics like generics, collections, events and delegates and OOP, please help others by posting your review. Thanks
Excellent book This is an excellent book on C#. I use it as a reference all the time for my ASP.NET dev. It's almost as big as the Learning C# book by the same author.
Overly complicated examples This was the first book on learning C# 2.0, and while at first I enjoyed the book, when the author started discussing more advanced topics like delegates and events, his examples, I felt, were overly complicated and often left me agitated trying to figure out why he programmed the examples the way he did. After reading other C# 2.0 books, I realized just how bloated the author's examples were. Anyone interested in a beginner C# 2.0 book should try Herbert Schildt's book, The Complete C# 2.0 Reference. His examples are concise, performing as much as necessary to convey the topic Mr. Schildt is currently discussing.
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br /I felt it necessary to write this review after encountering many instances online and in print of people suggesting this title, and my adivce to someone about to purchase this book is to shop around. There are better alternatives than this mediocre book. I especially encourage you to look at Schildt's book if you are new to C#. Charles Petzold even has a free C# 2.0 book (pfd) on his website that does a decent job explaining the .NET framework.
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