A powerful tool for delivering data–driven content across the Web, ADO.NET is the new set of data access services for Microsoft′s .NET Framework. Because of its many new features, experienced and new programmers alike need to learn ADO.NET from the ground up.
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RICHARD HUNDHAUSEN is an independent trainer and consultant, MCSD, MCDBA, and MCT. Richard has been architecting and building database applications on various platforms for over fifteen years. He has been teaching SQL Server and Visual Studio since 1997.
STEVEN BORG is an independent author, trainer, and consultant. A programmer since age fifteen, he was one of the first .NET adopters, and now trains and consults exclusively in .NET and XML development. In addition to a professional software development background, he has experience in applied mathematics, operations research, business process reengineering, and sales.
About Gearhead Press
Responding to the ongoing demands of IT professionals for current and reliable information on the latest programming technologies, Wiley Computer Publishing introduces the Gearhead Press titles. These books, written by accomplished trainers in their respective fields, focus on using real–world case studies to give readers the best information on leading topics.
The Gearhead Press titles are characterized by two imprints: In the Trenches and Point to Point. Both imprints include fast–paced books written by fellow IT professionals who have been there and done that. In the Trenches books guide readers to proficiency, and serve as practical, hands–on references after the initial tasks are accomplished. The Point to Point titles invite readers to join an IT team at a model company and implement technologies in real–world environments–demonstrating actual problems and solutions.
A comprehensive ADO.NET reference, tutorial, and best practices all in one book
Seasoned trainers Richard Hundhausen and Steven Borg provide a thorough and detailed reference to everything that′s ADO.NET. This is no small undertaking! The ADO.NET section of the .NET Framework, which you will come to know as System.Data and its related namespaces, delivers more than 200 classes, structures, and enumerations, each containing between five to fifty members. The authors have documented each namespace, including System.Data, System.Data.Common, System.Data.OleDb, System.Data.SqlClient, and System.Data.SqlTypes. In addition, numerous notes about what doesn′t work in ADO.NET as advertised, workarounds, and shortcuts are provided.
This book also goes one step further by teaching you how to use ADO.NET with best practices and scads of working code, placing special emphasis on:
∗ The objects that form the ADO.NET infrastructure
∗ The relationship between ADO.NET, XML, and SQL Server 2000
∗ Complete code examples, available in Visual Basic .NET
∗ Proven "Best Practices" on how to retrieve, manipulate, and update data with ADO.NET and XML
The companion Web site contains code examples in Visual Basic .NET and other resources.
Wiley Computer Publishing. Timely. Practical. Reliable.
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Visit the companion Web site at www.wiley.com/compbooks/hundhausen
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