Switching to Microsoft Windows 7: The Painless Way to Upgrade from Windows XP or Vista
by Elna Tymes; Charles Prael
Windows® Presentation Foundation Unleashed
by Adam Nathan; Daniel Lehenbauer - Lead Developer Responsible for WPF 3D
Essential Windows Communication Foundation: For .NET Framework 3.5
by Steve Resnick; Richard Crane; Chris Bowen
RESTful .NET, 1st Edition
by Jon Flanders
Advanced Windows Debugging
by Mario Hewardt; Daniel Pravat
.NET/COM interoperability in depth: comprehensive techniques and strategies
The most in-depth guide to .NET/COM interoperability ever published!
Covers every .NET/COM interop option, "gotcha," and workaround
Offers practical strategies for .NET migration and long-term .NET/COM coexistence
Compares .NET to COM and Java
Addresses many advanced issues, including Interop marshaling, Primary Interop Assemblies, using ActiveX Controls from managed code, using COM+ Services from managed code, converting your COM+ Applications to XML Web Services and .NET Remoting
The .NET and COM Interoperability Handbook will help you move your Windows(-based software into the future without abandoning the investments you've already made. Writing from the perspective of the experienced COM/COM+ developer, Alan Gordon offers the most realistic, in-depth coverage of .NET/COM interoperability ever presented. He illuminates all your .NET/COM interoperability options, offering practical advice for both migration and long-term coexistence. Coverage includes:
What COM/COM+ developers must know first about .NET/COM interoperability
Using the .NET/COM interoperability resources built into Visual Studio .NET
Calling COM/COM+ components from .NET
Calling .NET components from Win32/COM applications
Using COM+ Services from .NET applications
Turning your COM+ applications into an XML Web Service without writing any code
Understanding the impact of COM apartment threading on .NET performance
Overcoming mismatches between COM reference counting and .NET garbage collection
Interop marshaling, ActiveX controls, .NET remoting, and much more
Some information on this page was provided using data from Amazon.com®. View at Amazon >