MCTS Self-Paced Training Kit (Exam 70-536): Microsoft® .NET Framework—Application Development Foundation, Second Edition
by Tony Northrup
Pro C# 2008 and the .NET 3.5 Platform, Fourth Edition
by Andrew Troelsen
Pro WPF in C# 2008: Windows Presentation Foundation with .NET 3.5, Second Edition
by Matthew MacDonald
Beginning ASP.NET 3.5 in C# 2008: From Novice to Professional, Second Edition
by Matthew MacDonald
Pro LINQ: Language Integrated Query in C# 2008
by Joseph C. Rattz Jr.
Visual Studio 2008 is packed with features that help you create better software and do it with less repetition and drudgery. Visual Studio 2008 All-In-One Desk Reference For Dummies shows you how to make the most of this cool suite of tools! It’s all here!
This comprehensive, seven-books-in-one guide gets you up and running with Visual Studio 2008 in no time. You’ll discover Microsoft’s vision for Visual Studio, get familiar with the .Net environment and languages, and learn how to install, browse, and make connections with Visual Studio. Soon, you’ll be building applications for Vista, Office 2007, and mobile devices; using AJAX and LINQ; and testing and debugging your programs. Discover how to:
Understand Visual Studio’s role in software development
Work with .Net languages
Develop applications for Vista
Build smart client interfaces
Use the visual data designer
Use Ajax controls
Streamline application deployment
Debug your applications
Explore ASP. NET services
Work with strongly typed data sets
Access data with Visual Studio
Program with Visual Studio 2008
Build professional reports with Crystal Reports
Fully updated with new information on Vista and .NET Framework 3.0 development, MS Office application development, and more, Visual Studio 2008 All-In-One Desk Reference For Dummies also features a companion Web site packed with sample projects, supplemental podcasts, and a support forum. You’ll never find a smarter way to get up to speed with Visual Studio 2008!
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Based on 9 Ratings
Decent Overview but Light On Details - 2008-09-07
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Many people like the style of the "Dummies" books, but most will find this one tries to cover too much. It aspires to be the Swiss Army Knife of anything you could want to do with Visual Studio but that would take 5000 pages so it falls well short.
VS 2008 for Dummies is arranged into 7 "mini books" (not 6 as the cover artwork here on Amazon shows). And while each book has some great information, it typically covers too little to do much real development. Overall, it's biased towards web development (asp.net) using databases but also includes desktop applications, smart phone apps, deployment, unit testing, extending Visual Studio, etc. Unfortunately, unless you just want an overview, most of the mini-book topics really needs its own book.
There's a reason most beginning books on say just C# or Visual Basic are around 1000 pages. This book tries to cover both languages in only 163 pages.
Trying to cover so much information with relatively few pages creates problems. For example, Book 5 is titled Coding. Likely to save space, C# and Visual Basic examples and descriptions are intermixed on nearly every page. So the C# programmer is confused by all the Visual Basic examples and text, and visa versa. It's far from ideal unless you really do want to learn two complex programming languages at once, which seems like a bad idea for a beginning programmer buying an intro "Dummy" book.
So few pages per topic means a lot of important things are not covered at all. If you want to go much past useless "Hello World!" applications, a lot of what you'll likely need is just plain missing--i.e. basic file I/O using FileStream, ReadStream, etc. Many windows forms controls and other common .NET resources are also not covered.
I can imagine a few sorts of people for who might want to buy this book. The first is someone who wants an overview of the capabilities of VS 2008 but doesn't need to actually develop anything. An example might be someone managing a group of developers using VS 2008.
Another target audience might be experienced developers coming from a different or older development environment (such as Linux/Eclipse, VB 6.0, etc.) who only want to get up to speed on VS 2008. They would still likeley need to know (or buy another book on) the current .NET framework, however.
If someone just wants to play around and develop a few "Hello World!" examples, this book will get them there. In the "Dummies" tradition, it holds your hand fairly well through the basics.
If you're the sort of person who likes to read 2 or 3 different books on the same topic, this book may also prove useful. Visual Studio 2008 is a very complex product and this book presents some good information I've not seen elsewhere. And it presents information found in other books in new ways.
If you want to do some serious application or web development you either already need to know what you're doing, or you'll almost certainly need another book that covers your particular development area in more detail. This book will not, for example, teach you object oriented programming, or the full syntax of Visual Basic, ASP.NET or C#. It also doesn't cover the .NET framework and libraries in sufficient detail to do much more than play around.
In summary it's a useful overview, but unless that's all you need, you're probably better off with a book that targets the particular area of Visual Studio development you're most interested in. Many beginning books on C#, Visual Basic, ASP.NET, etc. do a good job of also covering Visual Studio 2008. So if you only want to buy one book, this might not be the best choice.
Good overview - 2009-11-02
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This book provides an overview of Visual Studio 2008. It is not a programming language book. To learn C#, Visual Basic, or C++ you need to get a book on those languages.
However, there are many parts of Visual Studio and the IDE that aren't covered anywhere else, except in the online documentation from Microsoft that sometimes can be a challenge to find what you are looking for.
This book explains a number of terms, such as LINQ, Ajax, Asp.net, ADO.net, CSS, etc. It also gives a good overview for deploying your application using OneClick or the Windows .msi installer.
A number of those kinds of topics are consolidated in this one reference.
The book is not a language tutorial. But it does exactly what it claims - it is an excellent Desk Reference for Visual Studio 2008.
Very Good Book - 2009-08-21
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Visual Studio 2008 All-In-One Desk Reference for Dummies is an excellent book. I found it to be very helpful and informative. I would recommend it for all who are starting out in VS 2008.
Needs more downloadable examples - 2009-07-02
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The book itself is reasonably well written. Unfortunately, the companion web site that is supposed to provide "projects with source code" is very light on material from the book. It only few, if any actual code examples from book content. When I was working through the book, and my results did not exactly match the authors, I had no easy way to figure out what I had done wrong. Knowing what I do now, I would have spent more money to buy a reference book that included downloadable sample code for the whole book.
Visual Studio 2008 for DUMMIES - 2009-01-11
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As a novice programmer I've found this book very useful. It will walk you through step by step instructions and answer any questions you might have working through complex problems. A must have for Visual Studio 2008 users.
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