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ADO.NET Examples and Best Practices for C# Programmers Customer Reviews: 1 Average Customer Rating:      Write a Review and tell the world about this title! Books on similar topics, in best-seller order: Books from the same publisher, in best-seller order:
The onset of the new .NET technology forces developers to completely rethink their
data access strategies. All at once there is an entirely new language and a new
set of data access interfaces to learn and incorporate into their designs. The
purpose of this book is to make the choice and implementation of the best of those
technologies far easier. It does this through working examples and numerous discussions
of what works and what doesnt. Vaughn's Best Practices are the techniques
that developers need to know because they cause the least amount of overhead,
problems and confusionfor the developer, the system and the team. While
some are quite simple to implement, other Best Practices require considerable
thought and forethought to enable. This is a developers bookfull of
hints, tips and notes passed on from those who show the medals and scars of battles
won and lost.
Author Information
William Vaughn - Bill is a developer, trainer, and author of numerous books
on Visual Basic and data access programming . After 14 years with Microsoft,
Bill retired last August in order to focus on his own writing and training for
Beta V . During his years with Microsoft, Bill held numerous roles which included
working with the Windows 1.0 Developer Liaison team, Microsoft University, the
Visual Basic User Education team, the Visual Studio marketing team, and finally
at Microsoft Technical Education. Currently, Bill writes and travels the globe
in order to guide, mentor, and train developers in his areas of expertise: Visual
Basic, data architectures, ActiveX Data Objects (ADO), and the new .NET Framework.
Peter Blackburn - Peter D. Blackburn is currently part of the Editorial Direction
Team of Apress with special responsibility towards Quality Assurance, and is
also CEO of Boost Data Ltd, and CTO of International Network Technologies Organization
Ltd. Since the age of 11, he has been a continual peripheral coding device to
one computer system or another. Peter studied Computer Science at Cambridge
University in England and has worked for the last 12 years as Lead Consultant
Developer on corporate and local government distributed database systems. He
has led and trained teams working with nearly all the Microsoft data access
technologies at the battle scarred sharp end, in addition to having designed
and implemented heavy-duty custom-built distributed client/server databases
using Open Source D-ISAM on Unix platforms.
Chapter 1: Introducing ADO.NET
Chapter 2: ADO.NET — Getting Connected
Chapter 3: ADO.NET Command Strategies
Chapter 4: ADO.NET DataReader Strategies
Chapter 5: Using the DataTable and DataSet
Chapter 6: Filtering, Sorting, and Finding
Chapter 7: ADO.NET Update Strategies
Chapter 8: ADO.NET Constraint Strategies
Chapter 9: ADO.NET Error Management Strategies
Chapter 10: ADO.NET and XML
Customer Reviews
Customer Reviews: 1 Average Customer Rating:      May 14, 2003     Poorly written... same information can be found in other books At first glance, it sounded like a great book. Ah I said to myself, now I get to see examples and best practices approach for ADO.NET in C#. As I started reading the book, it assumes that the reader came from the older ADO (ADOc) and repeatedly made that comparison. Lots of "IMHO". I really didn't care for his opinion. I was looking for best practices in C# and ADO.NET. Also, the book was a rewrite from an older ADO book for VB programmers. Finally, these writers don't now how to write. It's like reading a material from programmers when you ask them to put together a functional spec. Save your money and try another selection.
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