Object Oriented Programming in VB.Net
Author | : | |
Rating | : | 4.63 (869 Votes) |
Asin | : | 0201787059 |
Format Type | : | paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 696 Pages |
Publish Date | : | 2014-11-01 |
Language | : | English |
DESCRIPTION:
It starts by covering OO analysis, design and modelling using UML, and then moves on to a full discussion of OO concepts. Advanced topics such as data structures, database applications and software design patterns are also covered. Throughout, students are shown how to develop short programs in order to illustrate the fundamentals of algorithm design and structured programming.FeaturesObject-oriented programming is placed fully in the context of the software development life cycleIncludes a chapter on database development, covering database design principles, data access techniques and presenting data to the user-interfaceThe book is accompanied by a website at booksites/mcmonnies containing code for all programs in the book, additional program examples and information on using VB to program database ap
"This book is simply EXCELLENT!" according to AstonishingSystems_Com. Alistair McMonnies's website sucks:[]But this book is simply excellent! Alistair explains OOP in VB.net better than any other book I've ever read. Everything seems so simple when Alistair explains. I guess this is because he is "teaching" this stuff for a living. The authors of other books (I've purchased more than 25 books) "do" this for a living and therefore cannot explain well. They are so into the stuff (OOP) that they cannot perceive that the read
He shows the students how to develop short programs, and also covers more advanced topics such as data structures, components, and database programming. The book will be accompanied by a full supplements package in the form of a companion website containing code for all programs in the book, additional program examples, a case study, and information on using VB to program database applications.. He starts off by covering object-oriented analysis and design and modelling using UML, and then moves on to a detailed discussion of object oriented concepts such as objects and classes. Alistair McMonnies takes an object-oriented approach to teaching Visual Basic.Net (VB.Net), the new, fully object-oriented version of Visual Basic