Deitel, P: C# 2012 for Programmers
(Sprache: Englisch)
In C# 2012 for Programmers, the Deitels bring their proven Live Code approach to teaching today's powerful new version of the C# language. Like all Deitel Developer titles, they teach the best way possible: via hundreds of complete example C# programs, with...
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In C# 2012 for Programmers, the Deitels bring their proven Live Code approach to teaching today's powerful new version of the C# language. Like all Deitel Developer titles, they teach the best way possible: via hundreds of complete example C# programs, with thousands of lines of downloadable C# source code. Ideal for anyone who's worked with at least one programming language before, C# 2012 for Programmers is extraordinarily comprehensive. The Deitels teach object-oriented fundamentals, including classes and objects, inheritance, and polymorphism. Then, they go far beyond the basics, offering thorough coverage of intermediate and advanced language features as well. Covering both new Windows 8 and older Windows 7 GUI and graphics programming features, this edition adds brand-new chapters on:
- Windows 8 UI and XAML (including creating, testing, and uploading Windows Store apps)
- Windows 8 Graphics and Multimedia
- Building a Windows Phone 8 App
- Building a Windows Azure Cloud Computing App
- Asynchronous Programming with async and await
Throughout, the Deitels emphasize real-life examples, program clarity, software reuse, and component-oriented software construction.
This book contains over 200 complete C# 2012 programs (more than 20,000 lines of downloadable code), all thoroughly tested on Microsoft's latest compiler.
Inhaltsverzeichnis zu „Deitel, P: C# 2012 for Programmers “
Preface xxiii Before You Begin xxxi Chapter 1: Introduction 1 1.1 Introduction 2 1.2 Object Technology 2 1.3 C# 5 Object-Oriented Programming 5 1.4 Microsoft's .NET 6 1.5 Microsoft's Windows(R) Operating System 8 1.6 Windows Phone 8 for Smartphones 9 1.7 Windows Azure(TM)and Cloud Computing 11 1.8 Visual Studio Express 2012 Integrated Development Environment 11 1.9 Painter Test-Drive in Visual Studio Express 2012 for Windows Desktop 11 1.10 Painter Test-Drive in Visual Studio Express 2012 for Windows 8 15 Chapter 2: Dive Into(R) Visual Studio Express 2012 for Windows Desktop 20 2.1 Introduction 21 2.2 Overview of the Visual Studio Express 2012 IDE 21 2.3 Menu Bar and Toolbar 26 2.4 Navigating the Visual Studio IDE 28 2.5 Using Help 33 2.6 Using Visual App Development to Create a Simple App that Displays Text and an Image 34 2.7 Wrap-Up 44 2.8 Web Resources 45 Chapter 3: Introduction to C# Apps 46 3.1 Introduction 47 3.2 ASimple C# App: Displaying a Line of Text 47 3.3 Creating a Simple App in Visual Studio 52 3.4 Modifying Your Simple C# App 58 3.5 Formatting Text with Console.Write and Console.WriteLine 60 3.6 Another C# App: Adding Integers 61 3.7 Arithmetic 65 3.8 Decision Making: Equality and Relational Operators 67 3.9 Wrap-Up 71 Chapter 4: Introduction to Classes, Objects, Methods and strings 72 4.1 Introduction 73 4.2 Classes, Objects, Methods, Properties and Instance Variables 73 4.3 Declaring a Class with a Method and Instantiating an Object of a Class 74 4.4 Declaring a Method with a Parameter 78 4.5 Instance Variables and Properties 82 4.6 UML Class Diagram with a Property 86 4.7 Software Engineering with Properties and set and get Accessors 87 4.8 Auto-Implemented Properties 88 4.9 Value Types vs. Reference Types 89 4.10 Initializing Objects with Constructors 90 4.11 Floating-Point Numbers and Type decimal 93 4.12 Wrap-Up 99 Chapter 5: Control Statements: Part 1 101 5.1 Introduction 102 5.2 Control Structures 102 5.3 if Single-Selection Statement 104 5.4
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if...else Double-Selection Statement 105 5.5 while Repetition Statement 109 5.6 Counter-Controlled Repetition 110 5.7 Sentinel-Controlled Repetition 113 5.8 Nested Control Statements 118 5.9 Compound Assignment Operators 121 5.10 Increment and Decrement Operators 122 5.11 Simple Types 125 5.12 Wrap-Up 125 Chapter 6: Control Statements: Part 2 126 6.1 Introduction 127 6.2 Essentials of Counter-Controlled Repetition 127 6.3 for Repetition Statement 128 6.4 Examples Using the for Statement 132 6.5 do...while Repetition Statement 136 6.6 switch Multiple-Selection Statement 137 6.7 break and continue Statements 145 6.8 Logical Operators 147 6.9 Wrap-Up 153 Chapter 7: Methods: A Deeper Look 154 7.1 Introduction 155 7.2 Packaging Code in C# 155 7.3 static Methods, static Variables and Class Math 156 7.4 Declaring Methods with Multiple Parameters 158 7.5 Notes on Declaring and Using Methods 162 7.6 Method-Call Stack and Activation Records 163 7.7 Argument Promotion and Casting 163 7.8 The .NET Framework Class Library 165 7.9 Case Study: Random-Number Generation 167 7.10 Case Study: A Game of Chance; Introducing Enumerations 172 7.11 Scope of Declarations 177 7.12 Method Overloading 179 7.13 Optional Parameters 182 7.14 Named Parameters 183 7.15 Recursion 184 7.16 Passing Arguments: Pass-by-Value vs. Pass-by-Reference 187 7.17 Wrap-Up 191 Chapter 8: Arrays; Introduction to Exception Handling 192 8.1 Introduction 193 8.2 Arrays 193 8.3 Declaring and Creating Arrays 195 8.4 Examples Using Arrays 196 8.5 Case Study: Card Shuffling and Dealing Simulation 206 8.6 foreach Statement 210 8.7 Passing Arrays and Array Elements to Methods 212 8.8 Passing Arrays by Value and by Reference 214 8.9 Case Study: GradeBook Using an Array to Store Grades 218 8.10 Multidimensional Arrays 223 8.11 Case Study: GradeBook Using a Rectangular Array 228 8.12 Variable-Length Argument Lists 234 8.13 Using Command-Line Arguments 236 8.14 Wrap-Up 238 Chapter 9: Introduction to LINQ and the List Collection 239 9.1 Introduction 240 9.2 Querying an Array of int Values Using LINQ 241 9.3 Querying an Array of Employee Objects Using LINQ 245 9.4 Introduction to Collections 250 9.5 Querying a Generic Collection Using LINQ 253 9.6 Wrap-Up 255 9.7 Deitel LINQ Resource Center 255 Chapter 10: Classes and Objects: A Deeper Look 256 10.1 Introduction 257 10.2 Time Class Case Study 257 10.3 Controlling Access to Members 261 10.4 Referring to the Current Object's Members with the this Reference 262 10.5 Time Class Case Study: Overloaded Constructors 264 10.6 Default and Parameterless Constructors 270 10.7 Composition 271 10.8 Garbage Collection and Destructors 274 10.9 static Class Members 275 10.10 readonly Instance Variables 278 10.11 Data Abstraction and Encapsulation 279 10.12 Class View and Object Browser 281 10.13 Object Initializers 283 10.14 Wrap-Up 283 Chapter 11: Object-Oriented Programming: Inheritance 285 11.1 Introduction 286 11.2 Base Classes and Derived Classes 287 11.3 protected Members 289 11.4 Relationship between Base Classes and Derived Classes 290 11.5 Constructors in Derived Classes 313 11.6 Software Engineering with Inheritance 314 11.7 Class object 314 11.8 Wrap-Up 315 Chapter 12: OOP: Polymorphism, Interfaces and Operator Overloading 317 12.1 Introduction 318 12.2 Polymorphism Examples 320 12.3 Demonstrating Polymorphic Behavior 321 12.4 Abstract Classes and Methods 324 12.5 Case Study: Payroll System Using Polymorphism 326 12.6 sealed Methods and Classes 342 12.7 Case Study: Creating and Using Interfaces 342 12.8 Operator Overloading 353 12.9 Wrap-Up 356 Chapter 13: Exception Handling: A Deeper Look 358 13.1 Introduction 359 13.2 Example: Divide by Zero without Exception Handling 360 13.3 Example: Handling DivideByZeroExceptions and FormatExceptions 363 13.4 .NET Exception Hierarchy 368 13.5 finally Block 369 13.6 The using Statement 376 13.7 Exception Properties 377 13.8 User-Defined Exception Classes 381 13.9 Wrap-Up 385 Chapter 14: Graphical User Interfaces with Windows Forms: Part 1 386 14.1 Introduction 387 14.2 Windows Forms 388 14.3 Event Handling 390 14.4 Control Properties and Layout 397 14.5 Labels, TextBoxes and Buttons 401 14.6 GroupBoxes and Panels 404 14.7 CheckBoxes and RadioButtons 407 14.8 PictureBoxes 415 14.9 ToolTips 417 14.10 NumericUpDown Control 419 14.11 Mouse-Event Handling 421 14.12 Keyboard-Event Handling 424 14.13 Wrap-Up 427 Chapter 15: Graphical User Interfaces with Windows Forms: Part 2 428 15.1 Introduction 429 15.2 Menus 429 15.3 MonthCalendar Control 438 15.4 DateTimePicker Control 439 15.5 LinkLabel Control 442 15.6 ListBox Control 446 15.7 CheckedListBox Control 450 15.8 ComboBox Control 453 15.9 TreeView Control 457 15.10 ListView Control 462 15.11 TabControl Control 468 15.12 Multiple Document Interface (MDI) Windows 473 15.13 Visual Inheritance 480 15.14 User-Defined Controls 485 15.15 Wrap-Up 489 Chapter 16: Strings and Characters: A Deeper Look 490 16.1 Introduction 491 16.2 Fundamentals of Characters and Strings 492 16.3 string Constructors 493 16.4 string Indexer, Length Property and CopyTo Method 494 16.5 Comparing strings 495 16.6 Locating Characters and Substrings in strings 498 16.7 Extracting Substrings from strings 501 16.8 Concatenating strings 502 16.9 Miscellaneous string Methods 503 16.10 Class StringBuilder 504 16.11 Length and Capacity Properties, EnsureCapacity Method and Indexer of Class StringBuilder 505 16.12 Append and AppendFormat Methods of Class StringBuilder 507 16.13 Insert, Remove and Replace Methods of Class StringBuilder 509 16.14 Char Methods 512 16.15 (Online) Introduction to Regular Expressions 514 16.16 Wrap-Up 515 Chapter 17: Files and Streams 516 17.1 Introduction 517 17.2 Data Hierarchy 517 17.3 Files and Streams 519 17.4 Classes File and Directory 520 17.5 Creating a Sequential-Access Text File 529 17.6 Reading Data from a Sequential-Access Text File 538 17.7 Case Study: Credit Inquiry Program 542 17.8 Serialization 548 17.9 Creating a Sequential-Access File Using Object Serialization 549 17.10 Reading and Deserializing Data from a Binary File 553 17.11 Wrap-Up 555 Chapter 18: Generics 557 18.1 Introduction 558 18.2 Motivation for Generic Methods 559 18.3 Generic-Method Implementation 561 18.4 Type Constraints 564 18.5 Overloading Generic Methods 566 18.6 Generic Classes 567 18.7 Wrap-Up 576 Chapter 19: Collections 577 19.1 Introduction 578 19.2 Collections Overview 578 19.3 Class Array and Enumerators 581 19.4 Nongeneric Collections 584 19.5 Generic Collections 596 19.6 Covariance and Contravariance for Generic Types 603 19.7 Wrap-Up 606 Chapter 20: Databases and LINQ 607 20.1 Introduction 608 20.2 Relational Databases 609 20.3 A Books Database 610 20.4 LINQ to Entities and the ADO.NET Entity Framework 614 20.5 Querying a Database with LINQ 615 20.6 Dynamically Binding Query Results 627 20.7 Retrieving Data from Multiple Tables with LINQ 632 20.8 Creating a Master/Detail View App 637 20.9 Address Book Case Study 641 20.10 Tools and Web Resources 647 20.11 Wrap-Up 647 Chapter 21: Web App Development with ASP.NET 649 21.1 Introduction 650 21.2 Web Basics 651 21.3 Multitier App Architecture 652 21.4 Your First Web App 654 21.5 Standard Web Controls: Designing a Form 666 21.6 Validation Controls 670 21.7 Session Tracking 677 21.8 Case Study: Database-Driven ASP.NET Guestbook 685 21.9 Case Study: ASP.NET AJAX 693 21.10 Case Study: Password-Protected Books Database App 694 21.11 Wrap-Up 694 Chapter 22: XML and LINQ to XML 695 22.1 Introduction 696 22.2 XML Basics 696 22.3 Structuring Data 699 22.4 XML Namespaces 705 22.5 Document Type Definitions (DTDs) 708 22.6 W3C XML Schema Documents 711 22.7 Extensible Stylesheet Language and XSL Transformations 719 22.8 LINQ to XML: Document Object Model (DOM) 728 22.9 LINQ to XML Class Hierarchy 731 22.10 LINQ to XML: Namespaces and Creating Documents 740 22.11 XSLT with Class XslCompiledTransform 744 22.12 Wrap-Up 746 Chapter 23: Windows 8 UI and XAML 747 23.1 Introduction 748 23.2 Welcome App: Introduction to XAML Declarative GUI Programming 749 23.3 Painter App: Layouts; Event Handling 758 23.4 CoverViewer App: Data Binding, Data Templates and Styles 771 23.5 App Lifecycle 778 23.6 Wrap-Up 779 Chapter 24: Windows 8 Graphics and Multimedia 780 24.1 Introduction 781 24.2 Basic Shapes 782 24.3 Polylines and Polygons 784 24.4 SolidColorBrushes and ImageBrushes 786 24.5 GradientBrushes 788 24.6 Transforms 794 24.7 Windows 8 Customization: A Television GUI 797 24.8 Wrap-Up 807 Chapter 25: Building a Windows Phone 8 App 808 25.1 Introduction 809 25.2 Downloading the Windows Phone 8 SDK 810 25.3 Tip Calculator App Introduction 811 25.4 Test-Driving the Tip Calculator App 812 25.5 Tip Calculator Technologies Overview 812 25.6 Building the App's GUI 813 25.7 Adding Functionality to the App with C# 820 25.8 WMAppManifest.xml 825 25.9 Windows Phone Dev Center 825 25.10 Selling Your Apps in the Windows Phone Marketplace 827 25.11 Other Popular Mobile App Platforms 828 25.12 Developer Documentation 829 25.13 Additional Windows Phone 8 Resources 829 25.14 Wrap-Up 831 Chapter 26: Asynchronous Programming with async and await 832 26.1 Introduction 833 26.2 Basics of async and await 834 26.3 Executing an Asynchronous Task from a GUI App 835 26.4 Sequential Execution of Two Compute-Intensive Tasks 839 26.5 Asynchronous Execution of Two Compute-Intensive Tasks 841 26.6 Invoking a Flickr Web Service Asynchronously with WebClient 846 26.7 Wrap-Up 852 Chapter 27: Web App Development with ASP.NET: A Deeper Look 854 27.1 Introduction 855 27.2 Case Study: Password-Protected Books Database App 855 27.3 ASP.NET Ajax 871 27.4 Wrap-Up 877 Chapter 28: Web Services 879 28.1 Introduction 880 28.2 WCF Services Basics 881 28.3 HTTP get and post Requests 881 28.4 Representational State Transfer (REST) 882 28.5 JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) 882 28.6 Publishing and Consuming REST-Based XML Web Services 883 28.7 Publishing and Consuming REST-Based JSON Web Services 889 28.8 Equation Generator: Returning User-Defined Types 893 28.9 Wrap-Up 905 Chapter 29: Building a Windows Azure(TM) Cloud Computing App 906 29.1 Introduction 907 29.2 Installing the Windows Azure SDK for Visual Studio 2012 909 29.3 Windows Azure Cloud Services Accounts 909 29.4 Favorite Twitter Searches: Introduction 910 29.5 Favorite Twitter Searches: Test-Drive 911 29.6 Favorite Twitter Searches: Technologies Overview 914 29.7 Favorite Twitter Searches: Code 915 29.8 Security, Privacy and Reliability 921 29.9 Microsoft Windows Azure Resources 921 29.10 Microsoft Windows Azure Code Samples 923 29.11 Additional Web Resources 924 29.12 Wrap-Up 926 Chapter 30: GUI with Windows Presentation Foundation 927 30.1 Introduction 928 30.2 Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF) 928 30.3 Declarative GUI Programming Using XAML 929 30.4 Creating a WPF App 931 30.5 Laying Out Controls 932 30.5.1 General Layout Principles 933 30.5.2 Layout in Action 934 30.6 Event Handling 938 30.7 Commands and Common Application Tasks 946 30.8 WPF GUI Customization 951 30.9 Using Styles to Change the Appearance of Controls 951 30.10 Customizing Windows 957 30.11 Defining a Control's Appearance with Control Templates 960 30.12 Data-Driven GUIs with Data Binding 965 30.13 Wrap-Up 971 Chapter 31: WPF Graphics and Multimedia 972 31.1 Introduction 973 31.2 Controlling Fonts 973 31.3 Basic Shapes 975 31.4 Polygons and Polylines 977 31.5 Brushes 980 31.6 Transforms 987 31.7 WPF Customization: A Television GUI 989 31.8 Animations 999 31.9 Speech Synthesis and Speech Recognition 1001 31.10 Wrap-Up 1008 Chapter 32: ATM Case Study, Part 1: Object-Oriented Design with the UML 1009 32.1 Introduction 1010 32.2 Examining the ATM Requirements Document 1010 32.3 Identifying the Classes in the ATM Requirements Document 1018 32.4 Identifying Class Attributes 1025 32.5 Identifying Objects' States and Activities 1029 32.6 Identifying Class Operations 1033 32.7 Identifying Collaboration Among Objects 1040 32.8 Wrap-Up 1047 Chapter 33: ATM Case Study, Part 2: Implementing an Object-Oriented Design 1052 33.1 Introduction 1053 33.2 Starting to Program the Classes of the ATM System 1053 33.3 Incorporating Inheritance and Polymorphism into the ATM System 1058 33.4 ATM Case Study Implementation 1065 33.5 Wrap-Up 1089 Appendix A: Operator Precedence Chart 1092 Appendix B: Simple Types 1094 Appendix C: ASCII Character Set 1096 Appendix D: Number Systems 1097 D.1 Introduction 1098 D.2 Abbreviating Binary Numbers as Octal and Hexadecimal Numbers 1101 D.3 Converting Octal and Hexadecimal Numbers to Binary Numbers 1102 D.4 Converting from Binary, Octal or Hexadecimal to Decimal 1102 D.5 Converting from Decimal to Binary, Octal or Hexadecimal 1103 D.6 Negative Binary Numbers: Two's Complement Notation 1105 Appendix E: UML 2: Additional Diagram Types 1107 E.1 Introduction 1107 E.2 Additional Diagram Types 1107 Appendix F: Unicode(R) 1109 F.1 Introduction 1110 F.2 Unicode Transformation Formats 1111 F.3 Characters and Glyphs 1112 F.4 Advantages/Disadvantages of Unicode 1112 F.5 Using Unicode 1113 F.6 Character Ranges 1115 Index 1117
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Bibliographische Angaben
- Autoren: Paul J. Deitel , Harvey M. Deitel , Abbey Deitel
- 5, 1200 Seiten, Maße: 17,7 x 23,3 cm, Kartoniert (TB), Englisch
- Verlag: Prentice Hall
- ISBN-10: 0133440575
- ISBN-13: 9780133440577
- Erscheinungsdatum: 27.09.2013
Sprache:
Englisch
Rezension zu „Deitel, P: C# 2012 for Programmers “
"Excellent intro to visual app development, classes and objects. Excellent Arrays chapter. Outstanding presentations of the I/O facilities in .NET. The treatment of LINQ to XML is fabulous. Excellent effort to present such a complex topic as Entity Framework to beginners. Excellent presentation of the fundamentals of ASP.NET technology. I found especially enlightening the explanation of the differences between 'traditional' and AJAX-based request models. A very nice introduction to Windows Phone 8 development. Concise practical introduction to cloud computing and Windows Azure." -Octavio Hernandez, Microsoft Certified Solutions Developer (MCSD) "Updating an already excellent book with the latest .NET features (Visual Studio 2012, LINQ to Entities, ASP.NET 4.5, Windows 8 UI, Windows Phone development, Cloud Computing with Windows Azure, etc.) can only result in a superb product. The early introduction to classes and objects is brilliant. I like the explanation of properties and the discussion of value vs. reference types. Coverage of ASP.NET is exceptional. Arrays is one of my favorite chapters. Great job explaining inheritance, polymorphism, interfaces and operator overloading. An excellent introduction to Windows Store apps. An outstanding chapter on asynchronous programming-and excellent code examples. Clear explanation of RESTful web services." -Jose Antonio Gonzalez Seco, Parliament of Andalusia, Spain "Every college that I've been at has used the Deitel programming books-they're simply the standard when it comes to covering the fundamentals. I'm pleased to see the inclusion of a diverse set of more advanced material, including WPF, Azure and Win 8 Store apps. Databases and LINQ finds a good balance-I'm happy to see Entity Framework as that is what we are using in the real world. Good introduction to creating web apps via the designer." -Shawn Weisfeld, Microsoft MVP and President and Founder of UserGroup.tv "Excellent introduction to C# and .NET, using the
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Deitels' live-code approach and real-world examples." -Bonnie Berent, Microsoft C# MVP "An excellent introduction to XML, LINQ to XML and related technologies." -Helena Kotas, Microsoft "The explanation of abstract vs. concrete classes and why one would create an abstract class in the hierarchy was excellent. Using LINQ to search directories is very cool! Your overview of relational databases with the books database was excellent. I derived a lot from the Web App Development with ASP.NET chapters, especially the Session State and database-driven guest book sections. Excellent-this was my first experience with Windows Phone development-your chapter gave me a solid foundation." -Stephen Hustedde, South Mountain College "Good introduction to the most popular controls and working with events. I use the techniques of the Strings chapter in the line of business apps that I build. I liked the Files and Streams chapter and the real-world example." -Shawn Weisfeld, Microsoft MVP and President and Founder of UserGroup.tv "An excellent, true objects-first book. The generics material is a real asset." -Gavin Osborne, Saskatchewan Institute of Applied Science and Technology "Great chapter on polymorphism." -Eric Lippert, Formerly of Microsoft "Excellent chapter on exceptions." -Vinay Ahuja, Architect, Microsoft Corporation "Good overview of relational databases. It hits on the right LINQ idioms." -Alex Turner, Microsoft "A solid introduction to Visual Studio 2012. Covers the basics of Windows 8 apps. Very good introduction to ASP.NET-the examples are great." -Shay Friedman, Microsoft Visual C# MVP; cloud and web technologies expert, CodeValue "The book is adaptable for those who want to focus on GUI apps out of the gate. You give the reader a good foundation in XAML. Introduction to LINQ and the List Collection is a great chapter; you do such a good and consistent job of explaining your code in the narrative. The focus on using LINQ to manage data is unique and cutting edge. Fun chapter on Windows 8 Graphics and Multimedia." -Stephen Hustedde, South Mountain College
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