A press release from No Starch Press:
San Francisco, CA--From the author of the highly-acclaimed The Book of VB .NET comes a comprehensive introduction to Microsoft's newest programming language, Visual Basic 2005, the latest iteration of Visual Basic .NET. With "The Book of Visual Basic 2005: .NET Insight for Classic VB Developers" (No Starch Press, March 2006), less experienced developers will quickly learn to use VB 2005 effectively, and old-school VB developers who haven't yet made the jump to .NET will be able to transition seamlessly without wasting time covering familiar ground.
"The Book of Visual Basic 2005" is organized as a series of lightning tours and real-world examples that illustrate the VB 2005 way of doing things. Conversational in tone and eminently readable, it tackles the programming language's hot new features and explains how to work with .NET, but it doesn't water the information down for beginners. Each chapter begins with a brief overview of changes from VB 6, then uses examples to get experienced developers up to speed so they can perform in the VB 2005 environment.
"The Book of Visual Basic 2005" covers all the necessities: web development, XML, databases and Windows applications in VB 2005, as well as rarely discussed areas like deployment and hot new features like multithreading. This new guide also ditches jargon to explain clearly the advantages of object oriented programming and how to do it intelligently. This is all accompanied by extra code examples, references to additional online material, and helpful tips on planning, design, and architecture.
"Most VB developers who haven't yet switched to .NET can see the writing on the wall and know they need to get up to speed," said Bill Pollock, founder of No Starch Press. "Unlike a typical 'intro-to-a-new-app' book, 'The Book of Visual Basic 2005' speaks directly to those who already know the old way of doing things and just need to know what's different now."
In short, "The Book of Visual Basic 2005" everything that a professional developer in a hurry wants to know.
Additional Resources:
Sample chapter: http://www.nostarch.com/download/vb2005_ch11.pdf
Full table of contents: http://www.nostarch.com/vb2005_toc.htm
About the Author: Matthew MacDonald is a developer, author, and educator in all things Visual Basic and .NET. He's worked with Visual Basic and ASP since their initial versions, and written over a dozen books on the subject, including "The Book of VB .NET" (No Starch Press), "The Microsoft Visual Basic .NET Programmer's Cookbook" (Microsoft Press), and "Visual Basic 2005: A Developer's Notebook" (O'Reilly).
The Book of Visual Basic 2005
Matthew MacDonald
March 2006, 528 pp., $39.95
ISBN 1-59327-074-7
Available at fine bookstores everywhere, from www.oreilly.com/nostarch, or directly from No Starch Press (www.nostarch.com, orders@nostarch.com,
800.420.7240).
About No Starch Press: Founded in 1994, No Starch Press is one of the few remaining independent computer book publishers. We publish the finest in geek entertainment-unique books on technology, with a focus on Open Source, security, hacking, programming, and alternative operating systems. Our titles have personality, our authors are passionate, and our books tackle topics that people care about. See www.nostarch.com for more. (And by the way, most No Starch Press books use RepKover, a lay-flat binding that won't snap shut.)
San Francisco, CA--From the author of the highly-acclaimed The Book of VB .NET comes a comprehensive introduction to Microsoft's newest programming language, Visual Basic 2005, the latest iteration of Visual Basic .NET. With "The Book of Visual Basic 2005: .NET Insight for Classic VB Developers" (No Starch Press, March 2006), less experienced developers will quickly learn to use VB 2005 effectively, and old-school VB developers who haven't yet made the jump to .NET will be able to transition seamlessly without wasting time covering familiar ground.
"The Book of Visual Basic 2005" is organized as a series of lightning tours and real-world examples that illustrate the VB 2005 way of doing things. Conversational in tone and eminently readable, it tackles the programming language's hot new features and explains how to work with .NET, but it doesn't water the information down for beginners. Each chapter begins with a brief overview of changes from VB 6, then uses examples to get experienced developers up to speed so they can perform in the VB 2005 environment.
"The Book of Visual Basic 2005" covers all the necessities: web development, XML, databases and Windows applications in VB 2005, as well as rarely discussed areas like deployment and hot new features like multithreading. This new guide also ditches jargon to explain clearly the advantages of object oriented programming and how to do it intelligently. This is all accompanied by extra code examples, references to additional online material, and helpful tips on planning, design, and architecture.
"Most VB developers who haven't yet switched to .NET can see the writing on the wall and know they need to get up to speed," said Bill Pollock, founder of No Starch Press. "Unlike a typical 'intro-to-a-new-app' book, 'The Book of Visual Basic 2005' speaks directly to those who already know the old way of doing things and just need to know what's different now."
In short, "The Book of Visual Basic 2005" everything that a professional developer in a hurry wants to know.
Additional Resources:
Sample chapter: http://www.nostarch.com/download/vb2005_ch11.pdf
Full table of contents: http://www.nostarch.com/vb2005_toc.htm
About the Author: Matthew MacDonald is a developer, author, and educator in all things Visual Basic and .NET. He's worked with Visual Basic and ASP since their initial versions, and written over a dozen books on the subject, including "The Book of VB .NET" (No Starch Press), "The Microsoft Visual Basic .NET Programmer's Cookbook" (Microsoft Press), and "Visual Basic 2005: A Developer's Notebook" (O'Reilly).
The Book of Visual Basic 2005
Matthew MacDonald
March 2006, 528 pp., $39.95
ISBN 1-59327-074-7
Available at fine bookstores everywhere, from www.oreilly.com/nostarch, or directly from No Starch Press (www.nostarch.com, orders@nostarch.com,
800.420.7240).
About No Starch Press: Founded in 1994, No Starch Press is one of the few remaining independent computer book publishers. We publish the finest in geek entertainment-unique books on technology, with a focus on Open Source, security, hacking, programming, and alternative operating systems. Our titles have personality, our authors are passionate, and our books tackle topics that people care about. See www.nostarch.com for more. (And by the way, most No Starch Press books use RepKover, a lay-flat binding that won't snap shut.)