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Expert VB 2008 Business Objects
I have a passion for frameworks. In more than 20 years as a professional developer, I’ve never worked on a computing platform that did everything I needed it to do to build applications productively. The Microsoft .NET platform is wonderful, but it doesn’t always do quite what I want or need. To address those needs, I’m always looking for tools and frameworks, and sometimes I end up creating them myself. A framework is simply the codification of an architecture or design pattern. Before you can have a good framework, you need to have an architecture. That means you need to have a vision and a set of goals both for the architecture and the kinds of applications it should enable. This book is about application architecture, design, and development in .NET using object-oriented concepts. The focus is on creating business objects and implementing them to work in various distributed environments, including web and client/server configurations. The book makes use of a great many .NET technologies, object-oriented design and programming concepts, and distributed architectures. Much of the book walks through the thought process I used in designing and creating the CSLA .NET framework to support object-oriented application development in .NET. This includes a lot of architectural concepts and ideas. It also involves some in-depth use of advanced .NET techniques to create the framework. The middle section of the book (Chapters 6 through 16) provides this theoretical framework design material, illustrated with VB code. It’s a treatise on framework design and not a practical tutorial on actually building the framework with complete source code. So, it’ll help you use the framework effectively, rather than provide perfunctory type-and-compile exercises. After all, the full framework is available as a binary download. You can download the framework code in both VB and C#. The VB code is for reference. Only the C# version is “official,” and I recommend using the C# version for any real development work. The practical aspects of the book are in the first five and the final five chapters, which show you how to use the framework to build a sample application with several different interfaces. If you want, you could skip the framework design chapters and simply use the framework to build object-oriented applications in VB.
Rockford Lhotka with Joe Fallon - Personal Name
978-1-4302-1639-1
NONE
Information Technology
English
2009
1-714
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