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Reddit mentions of Pro C# 5.0 and the .NET 4.5 Framework (Expert's Voice in .NET)

Sentiment score: 4
Reddit mentions: 12

We found 12 Reddit mentions of Pro C# 5.0 and the .NET 4.5 Framework (Expert's Voice in .NET). Here are the top ones.

Pro C# 5.0 and the .NET 4.5 Framework (Expert's Voice in .NET)
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Found 12 comments on Pro C# 5.0 and the .NET 4.5 Framework (Expert's Voice in .NET):

u/[deleted] · 8 pointsr/cscareerquestions

I am interested in seeing what some answers are to this as I am always looking for books to read.


One book that I DID read before I started my career was "Pro C# and the .Net Platform by Andrew Troelson." This was pivotal for me as I had never used an object oriented language before, and it really gave me everything I needed to make the transition from C/C++ to application development.


Here is the latest version of the book (he does updates for each release):
http://www.amazon.com/Pro-NET-Framework-Experts-Voice/dp/1430242337


Note that even though it is 1560 pages, I really did read it from cover to cover. I had an internship in college that encouraged me to allocate time each day towards reading/learning so I had ample motivation to work through it.

u/Vuhdo · 3 pointsr/learnprogramming

Try looking over the faq first of all.

Secondly msdn is a very good resource for all things Microsoft (.Net, C#).

http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/w0x726c2(v=vs.110).aspx

Some C# examples

http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/aa288436(v=vs.71).aspx

I also like DotNetPearls, just a nicely "hey, remember how to do this?"


http://www.dotnetperls.com

As for books, I've been retouching up using "Pro C# 5.0 and the .NET 4.5 Framework" by Andrew Troelsen. I've really enjoyed it so far.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/1430242337?pc_redir=1404792870&robot_redir=1

Cheers

u/jepajepa · 2 pointsr/learnprogramming

Here are some that I found useful when I started

C#:
Beginner


Book This one covers C# and also the .NET framework

SQL:
Try this

u/bhldev · 2 pointsr/learnprogramming

This is the definitive author and source on .NET and C#.

u/pauloortins · 1 pointr/csharp

There are several books, blogs and videos that you can use.

These books are good choices:

C# 5.0 in a Nutshell and
Pro C# 5.0 and the .NET 4.5 Framework

I also wrote a blog post about it.

Resources to become a Ninja: C#

u/ericswc · 1 pointr/learnprogramming

As a language reference I'm pretty partial to this one:

u/SirRealle · 1 pointr/webdev

To learn IIS (and any other server management), it's just going to take practice. I use IIS for all of my .Net projects, and it took a few websites to get the hang of it. The more problems I ran into when using it, the faster I learned proper setup.

I started learning c# in college, and got an internship working in c# / .Net at my professor's company when I started out. Grabbed and worked through a few reference books since, and it's become the language I use for most of my paid software projects several years (and jobs) later as a freelance developer.

This has been the reference book that I've gone back to a few times over the last year. It's not necessarily the best book for a beginner, but I learned from someone hands-on when I was a beginner, so I can't really recommend a first book.

u/rcinsf · 1 pointr/RASalvatore

I own all the books and I suggest to lots of friends to buy them for their kids. I have no qualms in downloading PDFs of something I've bought. I do the same for computer books. I can find them all online, but I buy every one that I use.

For example, this fucking MONSTER book is a bitch to carry around: http://www.apress.com/microsoft/c/9781430242338 (1560 fucking pages, Y U NO HARDBACK ANYMORE?)

I buy it on Amazon $34.27 and then download the pdf. Might be shifty but fuck that. They used to give them away for free (APress) or for $10 but I'm not paying twice. And I'd just buy the PDF but for some reason they want $41.99 so fuck that.

I've bought the last 4 versions of it as well (great reading material before bed, and to keep up with all the new shit they add).