Binding: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 005.276
EAN: 9780130652072
ISBN: 0130652075
Label: Pearson Education
Manufacturer: Pearson Education
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 704
Publication Date: March 18, 2002
Publisher: Pearson Education
Sales Rank: 1683179
Studio: Pearson Education
Customer Reviews
Average Rating: 
Rating: - I hope there's better
I agree 100% with dc man2002 review. As an experienced/professional VC++ developer, I found this book completely useless as a reference to VC++ .Net. The book claims to cover UI development in VC++ .Net, but I don't think the acronym MFC was mentioned once in the book. I was looking more for something that would cover the new aspects of VC++ with a smooth transistion from 6.0 to .Net. I found myself starting to skip pages, then chapters, trying to find something to make the connection. I started ... Read More
Rating: - Awful, Pushes C# and Managed extensions
If you want to move from Visual C++ 6.0 to the newest version 7.0 or .NET, this book will either A) make you learn 600+ pages of managed extensions and C# that you don't need, thus you'll end up cursing Microsoft for making life so difficult for everybody; or B) will discourage you from using VC .NET altogether. Why not simply devote a tiny chapter to demonstrating how to do basic things familiar from VC 6.0 in unmanaged code and without C# ? The reader is lead to believe that Visual Studio .NET is unusable ... Read More
Rating: - Wonderful book
This book is proposed for the experienced C++ programmers. The book is very practical, with many examples, and includes a case study that is used to as a realistic demonstration that continues through many of the chapters. this book is intended for experienced C++ developers and provides all the practical insight they need to build Windows and Web Systems for Microsoft's .NET Platform using VC++. With this you can Leverage your Visual C++ skills in advanced .NET development! This book ".NET Architecture and ... Read More
Rating: - Great Book
This is a great book, perhaps the best on Visual C++ .Net I've ever read. Very clear, covers many interesting and new topics. Since there are not many books on VC++ .Net, and most of the .Net books cover C# and/or VB, this is really a must for any C++ developer who would like to move to C++ .Net.
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