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Home > Archive > microsoft.public.cert.exam.mcsd > December 2002 > skip .NET books
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| B.Noord 2002-12-31, 8:14 pm |
| Save money and paper. YOU CAN DO yourself what all these
authors did: Reading and copying MSDN-library
>-----Original Message-----
>Has anyone got an opinion on the following titles for a
potential MCSD?
>
>
>A Programmer's Guide to .NET By Alexei Fedorov. Published
by Addison Wesley
>Professional.
>
>Programming in the .NET Environment
>By Damien Watkins, Mark Hammond, Brad Abrams. Published
by Addison Wesley
>Professional.
>
>Essential .NET, Volume I: The Common Language Runtime
>By Don Box, Chris Sells. Published by Addison Wesley
Professional.
>
>C# Unleashed
>By Joseph Mayo. Published by Sams.
>
>Pragmatic ADO.NET: Data Access for the Internet World
>By Shawn Wildermuth. Published by Addison Wesley
Professional.
>
>--
>The Bull
>
>
>
>
>.
>
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| Alan Davis 2002-12-31, 8:14 pm |
| >Save money and paper. YOU CAN DO yourself what all these
>authors did: Reading and copying MSDN-library
Good idea - if you have the time!
But I agree the MSDN should be considered the Bible for those using
Microsoft technologies.
Many of the books are just copies of other books or even extracts from
the papers and web sites. However there are still plenty of good books
out there.
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| Kyle Burns 2002-12-31, 8:14 pm |
| While MSDN remains the best reference source for .NET, I have been very
happy with the Microsoft Press .NET materials. The VS6 stuff left a lot to
be desired, but they hit the mark this time.
--
=============================
Kyle M. Burns, MCAD, MCSD
kyle@CaliberIS.com
"Alan Davis" <.> wrote in message
news:nvqt0v4rvjmvj1uufo421aj7k
bke6f3qd5@4ax.com...
> >Save money and paper. YOU CAN DO yourself what all these
> >authors did: Reading and copying MSDN-library
>
> Good idea - if you have the time!
>
> But I agree the MSDN should be considered the Bible for those using
> Microsoft technologies.
>
> Many of the books are just copies of other books or even extracts from
> the papers and web sites. However there are still plenty of good books
> out there.
| |
| Alan Davis 2002-12-31, 8:14 pm |
| >While MSDN remains the best reference source for .NET, I have been very
>happy with the Microsoft Press .NET materials. The VS6 stuff left a lot to
>be desired, but they hit the mark this time.
The MS press books do tend to be quite good, that is, the one's
without mcsd/mcse/mcad etc in the title.
| |
| The Bull 2002-12-31, 8:14 pm |
| "B.Noord" <noord7@bart.nl> wrote in message
news:02d601c2ad9f$cb9ffba0$8df
82ecf@TK2MSFTNGXA02...
> Save money and paper. YOU CAN DO yourself what all these
> authors did: Reading and copying MSDN-library
Thanks. However, that was not what I asked.
--
The Bull
> >-----Original Message-----
> >Has anyone got an opinion on the following titles for a
> potential MCSD?
> >
> >
> >A Programmer's Guide to .NET By Alexei Fedorov. Published
> by Addison Wesley
> >Professional.
> >
> >Programming in the .NET Environment
> >By Damien Watkins, Mark Hammond, Brad Abrams. Published
> by Addison Wesley
> >Professional.
> >
> >Essential .NET, Volume I: The Common Language Runtime
> >By Don Box, Chris Sells. Published by Addison Wesley
> Professional.
> >
> >C# Unleashed
> >By Joseph Mayo. Published by Sams.
> >
> >Pragmatic ADO.NET: Data Access for the Internet World
> >By Shawn Wildermuth. Published by Addison Wesley
> Professional.
> >
> >--
> >The Bull
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >.
> >
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