Saturday, 12 January 2013
Free Download Professional ASP.NET 4 in C# and VB eBook
This book was written to introduce you to the features and capabilities
that ASP.NET 4 offers, as well as to give you an explanation of the
foundation that ASP.NET provides. We assume you have a general
understanding of Web technologies, such as previous versions of ASP.NET,
Active Server Pages 2.0/3.0, or Java Server Pages. If you understand the
basics of Web programming, you should not have much trouble following
along with this book's content.
If you are brand new to ASP.NET, be sure to check out Beginning ASP.NET 4: In C# and VB by Imar Spaanjaars (Wiley Publishing, Inc., 2010) to help you understand the basics.
In addition to working with Web technologies, we also assume that you understand basic programming constructs, such as variables, For Each loops, and object-oriented programming.
You may also be wondering whether this book is for the Visual Basic developer or the C# developer. We are happy to say that it is for both! When the code differs substantially, this book provides examples in both VB and C#.
This book explores the 4 release of ASP.NET. It covers each major new feature included in ASP.NET 4 in detail. The following list tells you something about the content of each chapter.
Click Here To Download
Enjoy!!
If you are brand new to ASP.NET, be sure to check out Beginning ASP.NET 4: In C# and VB by Imar Spaanjaars (Wiley Publishing, Inc., 2010) to help you understand the basics.
In addition to working with Web technologies, we also assume that you understand basic programming constructs, such as variables, For Each loops, and object-oriented programming.
You may also be wondering whether this book is for the Visual Basic developer or the C# developer. We are happy to say that it is for both! When the code differs substantially, this book provides examples in both VB and C#.
This book explores the 4 release of ASP.NET. It covers each major new feature included in ASP.NET 4 in detail. The following list tells you something about the content of each chapter.
- Chapter 1, ″Application and Page Frameworks.″
The first chapter covers the frameworks of ASP.NET applications as well
as the structure and frameworks provided for single ASP.NET pages. This
chapter shows you how to build ASP.NET applications using IIS or the
built-in Web server that comes with Visual Studio 2010. This chapter
also shows you the folders and files that are part of ASP.NET. It
discusses ways to compile code and shows you how to perform cross-page
posting. This chapter ends by showing you easy ways to deal with your
classes from within Visual Studio 2010.
- Chapters 2, 3, and 4.
These three chapters are grouped together because they all deal with
server controls. This batch of chapters starts by examining the idea of
the server control and its pivotal role in ASP.NET development. In
addition to looking at the server control framework, these chapters
delve into the plethora of server controls that are at your disposal for
ASP.NET development projects. Chapter 2, ″ASP.NET Server Controls and
Client-Side Scripts,″ looks at the basics of working with server
controls. Chapter 3, ″ASP.NET Web Server Controls,″ covers the controls
that have been part of the ASP.NET technology since its initial release
and the controls that have been added in each of the ASP.NET releases.
Chapter 4, ″Validation Server Controls,″ describes a special group of
server controls: those for validation.
- Chapter 5, ″Working with Master Pages.″
Master pages provide a means of creating templated pages that enable
you to work with the entire application, as opposed to single pages.
This chapter examines the creation of these templates and how to apply
them to your content pages throughout an ASP.NET application.
- Chapter 6, ″Themes and Skins.″
The Cascading Style Sheet files you are allowed to use in ASP.NET
1.0/1.1 are simply not adequate in many regards, especially in the area
of server controls. This chapter looks at how to deal with the styles
that your applications require and shows you how to create a centrally
managed look-and-feel for all the pages of your application by using
themes and the skin files that are part of a theme.
- Chapter 7, ″Data Binding.″
One of the more important tasks of ASP.NET is presenting data, and this
chapter looks at the underlying capabilities that enable you to work
with the data programmatically before issuing the data to a control.
- Chapter 8, ″Data Management with ADO.NET.″
This chapter presents the ADO.NET data model provided by ASP.NET, which
allows you to handle the retrieval, updating, and deleting of data
quickly and logically.
- Chapter 9, ″Querying with LINQ.″
The.NET Framework 4 includes a nice access model language called LINQ.
LINQ is a set of extensions to the .NET Framework that encompass
language-integrated query, set, and transform operations. This chapter
introduces you to LINQ and how to effectively use this feature in your
Web applications today.
- Chapter 10, ″Working with XML and LINQ to XML.″
The .NET Framework and ASP.NET 4 have many capabilities built into
their frameworks that enable you to easily extract, create, manipulate,
and store XML. This chapter takes a close look at the XML technologies
built into ASP.NET and the underlying .NET Framework.
- Chapter 11, ″Introduction to the Provider Model.″ The provider model
is built into ASP.NET to make the lives of developers so much easier
and more productive than ever before. This chapter gives an overview of
this provider model and how it is used throughout ASP.NET 4.
- Chapter 12, ″Extending the Provider Model.″
After an introduction of the provider model, this chapter looks at some
of the ways to extend the provider model found in ASP.NET 4. This
chapter also reviews a couple of sample extensions to the provider
model.
- Chapter 13, ″Site Navigation.″ Most
developers do not simply develop single pages—they build applications.
One of the application capabilities provided by ASP.NET 4 is the site
navigation system covered in this chapter.
- Chapter 14, ″Personalization.″
Developers are always looking for ways to store information pertinent
to the end user. After it is stored, this personalization data has to be
persisted for future visits or for grabbing other pages within the same
application. The ASP.NET team developed a way to store this
information—the ASP.NET personalization system. The great thing about
this system is that you configure the entire behavior of the system from
the web.config file.
- Chapter 15, ″Membership and Role Management.″
This chapter covers the membership and role management system developed
to simplify adding authentication and authorization to your ASP.NET
applications. This chapter focuses on using the web.config file for
controlling how these systems are applied, as well as on the server
controls that work with the underlying systems.
- Chapter 16, ″Portal Frameworks and Web Parts.″ This chapter explains Web Parts—a way of encapsulating pages into smaller and more manageable objects.
- Chapter 17, ″HTML and CSS Design with ASP.NET.″
Visual Studio 2010 places a lot of focus on building a CSS-based Web.
This chapter takes a close look at how you can effectively work with
HTML and CSS design for your ASP.NET applications.
- Chapter 18, ″ASP.NET AJAX.″ AJAX is an acronym for Asynchronous JavaScript and XML.
In Web application development, it signifies the capability to build
applications that make use of the XMLHttpRequest object. Visual Studio
2010 contains the ability to build AJAX-enabled ASP.NET applications
from the default install of the IDE. This chapter takes a look at this
way to build your applications.
- Chapter 19, ″ASP.NET AJAX Control Toolkit.″
Along with the capabilities to build ASP.NET applications that make use
of the AJAX technology, a series of controls is available to make the
task rather simple. This chapter takes a good look at the ASP.NET AJAX
Control Toolkit and how to use this toolkit with your applications
today.
- Chapter 20, ″Security.″ This chapter
discusses security beyond the membership and role management features
provided by ASP.NET 4. This chapter provides an in-depth look at the
authentication and authorization mechanics inherent in the ASP.NET
technology, as well as HTTP access types and impersonations.
- Chapter 21, ″State Management.″
Because ASP.NET is a request-response–based technology, state
management and the performance of requests and responses take on
significant importance. This chapter introduces these two separate but
important areas of ASP.NET development.
- Chapter 22, ″Caching.″
Because of the request-response nature of ASP.NET, caching (storing
previous generated results, images, and pages) on the server becomes
rather important to the performance of your ASP.NET applications. This
chapter looks at some of the advanced caching capabilities provided by
ASP.NET, including the SQL cache invalidation feature which is part of
ASP.NET 4. This chapter also takes a look at object caching and object
caching extensibility.
- Chapter 23, ″Debugging and Error Handling.″
This chapter tells you how to properly structure error handling within
your applications. It also shows you how to use various debugging
techniques to find errors that your applications might contain.
- Chapter 24, ″File I/O and Streams.″ This chapter takes a close look at working with various file types and streams that might come into your ASP.NET applications.
- Chapter 25, ″User and Server Controls.″
Not only can you use the plethora of server controls that come with
ASP.NET, but you can also use the same framework these controls use and
build your own. This chapter describes building your own server controls
and how to use them within your applications.
- Chapter 26, ″Modules and Handlers.″
This chapter looks at two methods of manipulating the way ASP.NET
processes HTTP requests: HttpModule and HttpHandler. Each method
provides a unique level of access to the underlying processing of
ASP.NET, and each can be a powerful tool for creating Web applications.
- Chapter 27, "ASP.NET MVC." ASP.NET MVC is the latest major addition to ASP.NET and has generated a lot of excitement from the development community. ASP.NET MVC supplies you with the means to create ASP.NET using the Model-View-Controller models that many developers expect. ASP.NET MVC provides developers with the testability, flexibility, an...
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Enjoy!!
Authors: Junaid Afzal and Muhammad Taimur Adil
We, student of Software Engineering from Lahore Pakistan.
Junaid Afzal →
Muhammad Taimur Adil →
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