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VISUAL BASIC BOOKS
Posted in Visual Basic (Wednesday, October 8, 2008)
Written by Joseph Moniz. By Wrox Press.
The regular list price is $59.99.
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5 comments about Enterprise Application Architecture with VB, ASP and MTS.
- In a nutshell Moniz puts forth a great concept, but plan on using your own implementation. Read on for the details. When I first read this book I couldn't turn the pages fast enough. I was elated that someone had an architecture that supported just about everything my users were asking for. Then we implemented, or tried to anyway. The code generated by his 'Object Factory' was poorly commented and dismally formated. It uses older ODBC, and improperly uses CreateObject() when the components are supposed to be built to take advantage of MTS. (You must use CreateInstance() to keep your components in the same context) He is also passing whole user-defined objects across process boundaries instead of serializing the data. Incredible performance hit! Still enamored with the concept I converted it to ADO and fixed the MTS errors, thinking that I would just copy this cleaned-up project over and over and edit it to support new objects. Man, was that ever complicated! So, now I'm in my third iteration (and last) of trying to implement this architecture by partitioning the functionality into separate components. In theory, this redisign should work better, and be much simpler than his implementation. (Maybe I'll write a book with my version.) ;^)>
- Even as a non-VB programmer I got some great ideas from this book, such as the implicit pattern for implementing auditable entities and dynamic property lists in SQL Server. The (perhaps too long) introductory material on "farms" (distribution and components) had me yelling "Yes!" out loud. But, I found the organization of the book befuddling at times, and thought some of the methods and advice weren't as universal as they sounded. Look at this as one man's well-refined method for delivering a broad, but not universal, class of applications on the VB/MTS/ASP/SQL Server platform. Was worth my time. Thanks Mr. Moniz!
- This book is mainly impressive but also, as some other reviewers mentionned, lacking some content.
The great thing is that it does go over some quite good VB code example for reusable applications. I would say that about 40-45% of this book is to "learn and understand" how to THINK about reusable component while most of the rest is for the actual VB code that does it (and some leftovers for win32 & web interfaces). Indeed, it takes, at the least, an interesting position on Business Logic where he is mainly putting this logic on the data tier but I could agree that in some cases, it could be beneficial. As a .NET reviewer, I have to take special care about books that I'm now reading on VB6 code. This book can easily be migrated to the VB.NET syntax mainly because it's the thinking of the book rather than the actual code. Most or all of the ideas are available with VB.NET but the code will obviously needs some changes in order to accomodate ADO.NET, COM+ Application (somewhat really different than what we are used to with VB6), and some syntax modifications that came along with VB.NET. Even though there is this "issue" about Business Rules, this book remains an impressive reading about Enterprise Application ARCHITECTURE.
- This book covers comprehensively how to create a system that allows you to add, edit, retrieve, undo changes on a distributed system.
You will need to tread carefully in adopting this systems because nothing is offered to effectively analyse the system. How to do you effectively form queries against the large number of tables generated? OLAP has been fleetingly mentioned as a new book but to date I have not seen any hint of it coming out. What also is left out is the source code to the code generator the author has created. It would even be worthwhile buying, but you cannot. Therefore you are stuck with what is offered unless you are prepared to spend hours creating your own. In summary, interesting concepts but you might drown in the complexity of the system
- There is so much muck covering the gems that the proposed architecture never becomes clear. Too much, "Okay, now I'm going to tell you..." "Next chapter I'm going to tell you..." If this book had a good rewritting and an editor, it could have been a worthwhile effort. Also, the focus is split between how to set the physical architecture (how many computers, etc) and how to write general purpose business objects that in theory could be used by many unrelated departments, and split again into how what essentially is making objects suitable for automatic code generation. This book needs to be split into maybe three refocused books, and needs a chainsaw to chop out the wordiness.
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Posted in Visual Basic (Wednesday, October 8, 2008)
Written by D. F. Scott. By Que Pub.
The regular list price is $24.95.
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No comments about Visual Basic for Windows by Example (By Example Series).
Posted in Visual Basic (Wednesday, October 8, 2008)
Written by Gaston Carlos Hillar. By Hasa.
The regular list price is $38.00.
Sells new for $30.74.
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No comments about Visual Basic 2005 y .Net 2.0.
Posted in Visual Basic (Wednesday, October 8, 2008)
Written by Mike McKelvy and Sybex Inc.. By Sybex.
The regular list price is $44.99.
Sells new for $4.68.
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5 comments about MCSD: Visual Basic 5 Study Guide.
- This book, despite its acceptable editing and writing standards, just does not contain a large amount of material needed to pass the exam. Either buy one of the 1300-pagers or Exam Cram, or both. This book is the worst of both worlds unfortunately.
- This is a very good book to start preparing for Exam 70-165. All the exam topics are covered and the topics are well explained. However, the book lacks details on some important topics like the Setup wizard (Bootstrap files, ini files, primary and secondary cab files) and ActiveX controls (Ambient and Extender properties). However, its very good for its price. I used this book, VB Books online and the transcenders and passed exam 70-165 with a good score on my first attempt.
- Mistakes, mistakes everywhere! When following instructions to create a practice application, the code was wrong, it didn't work! Even the CD-ROM stuff was incorrect. Studying for these cert tests is tough enough without the added frustration of textbooks proclaiming to be "Study Guides" that are riddled with gross errors. I ended up using Microsoft's VB Programmers Guide and the Visual Basic 5.0 online documentation. I passed the certification test (hurrah) but certainly NOT due to any help from this book! Don't people read/edit or review this stuff? Doesn't the author check to be sure his code produces the desired results?
- this book is very easy to understand. good price
- I debated giving this one 2 stars, because I think you will fail the exam if you only use this as your study guide. I covered this book several times cover-to-cover. I agree with many of the other reviewers that there were an inordinate amount of typos and mistakes. The worst part, however, was that the material was not deep enough and the questions not difficult enough to adequately prep you for the exam.
After reading each chapter several times and consistently scoring 90-100% on each of the practice exams (the end-of-chapter tests - the promised practice exam on CD-ROM did not work, nor did the supposed correction), I was full of bravado. Fortunately, I got access to a Transcender exam the day before the test. What an eye-opener that was. I took all 3 of the Transcenders and they blew me away. I was scoring in the low 60's. I pulled an allnighter with the Transcenders and the MSDN CD's and snatched victory from the jaws of sure defeat. I noted several of the other reviewers noted that they used this material in conjunction with the Transcenders. On its own, I think it is insufficient to prepare you.END
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Posted in Visual Basic (Wednesday, October 8, 2008)
Written by Rosemary Schmavonian. By DDC Publishing.
The regular list price is $24.10.
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No comments about Microsoft Powerpoint 97 (Visual Reference Basics).
Posted in Visual Basic (Wednesday, October 8, 2008)
Written by Mac Bride. By Teach Yourself Books.
The regular list price is $18.60.
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No comments about Visual Basic (Teach Yourself).
Posted in Visual Basic (Wednesday, October 8, 2008)
Written by Steven Hollzner and Steven Holzner. By Brady Publishing.
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No comments about Visual Basic Programming.
Posted in Visual Basic (Wednesday, October 8, 2008)
Written by Baltazar Birnios and Mariano Birnios. By M.P. Ediciones.
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No comments about Visual Basic 6.0 - Manual de Referencia Con Un CD.
Posted in Visual Basic (Wednesday, October 8, 2008)
Written by William J. Buchanan. By John Wiley & Sons Inc.
The regular list price is $98.50.
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3 comments about Software Development for Engineers: with C, Pascal, C++, Assembly Language, Visual Basic, HTML, JavaScript and Java.
- The material about the different languages is good, but a little bit supperficial, it is only a preview, I cosider that is better to learn each language separately.
- If you have been trying to decide which language you want to start programming in, or would like to see the structure of other programming languages, this is the book.
It will not teach you the from novice, but will give you a general insight into each of the languages.
- If you are an engineer on the field, you already had general ideas about these programming languages, so this book is a joke! DON'T WASTE MONEY ON IT ! You need more specific books. This book is best for 2nd-year engineering students, or general readers who are CURIOUS about software development, it will satify your curiosity, but it will not take you anywhere ! The book title "...For ENGINEERS" stinks because engineers need much deeper book than that, they need 'real food', not just a 'smell' of foods which may [make them upset]!!!
I gave '1 star' for the book title "...ENGINEERS" and '3 stars' for general readers, so my rating is 2 stars.
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Posted in Visual Basic (Wednesday, October 8, 2008)
Written by David Boctor. By Microsoft Pr.
The regular list price is $34.99.
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4 comments about Microsoft Office 97 Visual Basic: Step by Step (Step By Step (Microsoft)).
- Thinking that the best people to write a book on Visual Basic for Apps are the people who created the product, I sent off for this book. I was disappointed to discover that a LOT of features of the VBA language were left out. I think the book is a good introduction to the language for beginners or those who know just a little ordinary VB, and who are willing to spend the time going chapter-to-chapter. It is NOT a good reference manual however, as it leaves major chunks of the language out, and the index is not very comprehensive. I now have to go buy a QUE book (one of the Using... series) which I have historically found to be the best reference. Poor performance, Microsoft!
- This Book is not at all like all the others in the Step by Step Series and I wish I had put my money in to another book. OK I'm a novice but as a novice in Visual Basic for Applications I need to build some confidence in what I'm doing. With this in mind; You should be able to enter the code from the book and it should work. The code from the CD that comes with the books works well but there's nothing like working with a book to enter the code Step by Step just to find the code won't work. I've got 4 of the Step by step Series and this one is a flop and As for the name, it should be Stumble and fall.
- This is a perfect example of how a non programmer like myself can find happiness in the confines of the Visual Basic world. I don't want, or have time to learn VB from the ground up! I need fast, concise lessons, and answers to how VB works in Office 97. A great book for those who need this data, and are not afraid to spend a bit of the first few pages wondering if they bought the right book. It quickly picks up and takes you "step by step" and helps you really understand what is going on. There is something in it for everybody from the beginner to the seasoned pro. If the begining was a bit clearer, it would have rated a 5.
- I love the Microsoft Step by Step books and this one is no exception. (I used the Word and Excel advanced books to help me pass MOUS expert tests) I was fairly inexperienced not to mention scared to death when it comes to macros, Visual Basic, VBA, the VBA editor, windows objects, methods, properties, activex controls, integrated office solutions and the like. (I do have a programming background but not in windows object-oriented programming.) This book eases you into those topics and shows you that they are not as bad you thought.( Some people are not good at jumping head first into something new, ya know.) This book is very clear about explaining things and the hands-on exercises are great. I do their exercises and then play around a bit and end up learning even more but the book is my base in learning the material. This book is not a reference book. It is a learning book, meant to be read from cover to cover. I'm glad I have this book to assist me in my journey of becoming a desktop specialist.
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Enterprise Application Architecture with VB, ASP and MTS
Visual Basic for Windows by Example (By Example Series)
Visual Basic 2005 y .Net 2.0
MCSD: Visual Basic 5 Study Guide
Microsoft Powerpoint 97 (Visual Reference Basics)
Visual Basic (Teach Yourself)
Visual Basic Programming
Visual Basic 6.0 - Manual de Referencia Con Un CD
Software Development for Engineers: with C, Pascal, C++, Assembly Language, Visual Basic, HTML, JavaScript and Java
Microsoft Office 97 Visual Basic: Step by Step (Step By Step (Microsoft))
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