| Overview
Written by experts on the Microsoft® .NET programming platform,
ADO.NET in a Nutshell delivers everything .NET programmers
will need to get a jump-start on ADO.NET technology or to sharpen
their skills even further. In the tradition of O'Reilly's In a
Nutshell Series, ADO.NET in a Nutshell is the most complete
and concise source of ADO.NET information available. ADO.NET is the
suite of data access technologies in the .NET Framework that
developers use to build applications services accessing relational
data and XML. Connecting to databases is a fundamental part of most
applications, whether they are web, Windows®, distributed,
client/server, XML Web Services, or something entirely different.
But ADO.NET is substantially different from Microsoft's previous
data access technologies--including the previous version of ADO--so
even experienced developers need to understand the basics of the
new disconnected model before they start programming with it.
Current with the .NET Framework 1.1, ADO.NET in a Nutshell
offers one place to look when you need help with anything related
to this essential technology, including a reference to the ADO.NET
namespaces and object model. In addition to being a valuable
reference, this book provides a concise foundation for programming
with ADO.NET and covers a variety of issues that programmers face
when developing web applications or Web Services that rely on
database access. Using C#, this book presents real world, practical
examples that will help you put ADO.NET to work immediately. Topics
covered in the book include:
An Introduction to ADO.NET Connections, Commands and DataReaders Disconnected Data Advanced DataSets Transactions DataViews and Data Binding XML and the DataSet
Included with the book is a Visual Studio .NET add-in that
integrates the entire reference directly into your help files. When
combining ADO.NET in a Nutshell with other books from
O'Reilly's .NET In a Nutshell series, you'll have a comprehensive,
detailed and independent reference collection that will help you
become more productive.
Editorial ReviewsProduct DescriptionWritten by experts on the Microsoft® .NET programming platform, ADO.NET in a Nutshell delivers everything .NET programmers will need to get a jump-start on ADO.NET technology or to sharpen their skills even further. In the tradition of O'Reilly's In a Nutshell Series, ADO.NET in a Nutshell is the most complete and concise source of ADO.NET information available. ADO.NET is the suite of data access technologies in the .NET Framework that developers use to build applications services accessing relational data and XML. Connecting to databases is a fundamental part of most applications, whether they are web, Windows®, distributed, client/server, XML Web Services, or something entirely different. But ADO.NET is substantially different from Microsoft's previous data access technologies--including the previous version of ADO--so even experienced developers need to understand the basics of the new disconnected model before they start programming with it. Current with the .NET Framework 1.1, ADO.NET in a Nutshell offers one place to look when you need help with anything related to this essential technology, including a reference to the ADO.NET namespaces and object model. In addition to being a valuable reference, this book provides a concise foundation for programming with ADO.NET and covers a variety of issues that programmers face when developing web applications or Web Services that rely on database access. Using C#, this book presents real world, practical examples that will help you put ADO.NET to work immediately. Topics covered in the book include: - An Introduction to ADO.NET
- Connections, Commands and DataReaders
- Disconnected Data
- Advanced DataSets
- Transactions
- DataViews and Data Binding
- XML and the DataSet
Included with the book is a Visual Studio .NET add-in that integrates the entire reference directly into your help files. When combining ADO.NET in a Nutshell with other books from O'Reilly's .NET In a Nutshell series, you'll have a comprehensive, detailed and independent reference collection that will help you become more productive. |
Top Sellers in This Category | Browse Similar Topics | | Top Level Categories:Sub-Categories: | | |
Reader Reviews From Amazon (Ranked by 'Helpfulness') Average Customer Rating: based on 10 reviews. The best way to learn ADO.NET, 2007-08-25 Reviewer rating: The bitter, Faster, and Lighter way to learn ADO.NET , the book contains and explain ALL ADO.NET Classes in simple way , of course the book written by experts in Microsot .NET .
I advise every one who want to learn ADO.NET in the fastest time to Buy this book .
| A long time Oracle and Mysql programmer learns the basics of ADO.NET, 2006-05-28 Reviewer rating: --A Concise Reference with only the useful information. ADO.NET really does take a different approach from the other database API's. I have worked alot with JDBC, MySql (via java and PHP), Oracle and ODBC. In ADO.NET, the concept of a disconnected Dataset forces you to rely heavily upon Microsoft's Object model. The alternative to this book seemed to be either: Search through MSDN's reference material Or Purchase one of the many books which regurgitate the steps in using the wizards. The MSDN reference material really did not show me the expected "idioms" or paradigms in writing function db applications. This book helped me to understand what is really happening beneath these opaque designs. It helped me to understand and solve some of the necessities in creating data driven ASP.NET DB applications. | Microsoft MVP 2005 - Visual C# loves this one, 2005-07-26 Reviewer rating: I own over 50 books on .NET including several on ADO.NET. This book is my favorite on ADO.NET. Thus, it is the one I use most often. It has a great blend of discussion, documentation, and code samples. It is much easier and more thorough than much of the MSDN documentation or most other books. I've yet to run into a situation where the answer I need isn't either in this book or gives me a great starting point to find that answer.
Virtually every ADO.NET oriented class, method, event, and property is covered.
This book is definitely worth purchasing. | Incredible!, 2004-04-28 Reviewer rating: I've owned this book for 3 days and cannot put it down! I have not been a big fan of O'Reilly over the years, but this book is "incredible". It goes into the detail that most books seem to omit and it's those details that we "developers" desperately need. I would recommend this book to ANY and ALL .NET developers who are writing code that hits against a database. There are topics covered in this book that Microsoft's own MSDN and VS.NET help system seem to fail at properly explaining. It's because of this that I've found myself (all too often) going to codeguru.com and google groups to get answers to ADO.NET questions that this book actually covers. My hat goes off to authors Matthew MacDonald and Bill Hamilton on a job well done. Coming from a Visual Basic background and now working in VB.NET and C#.NET, this book should satisfy both the VB.NET and C# developer. | Excellent reference, and a good introduction to ADO, 2004-03-14 Reviewer rating: This book is classic O'Reilly. It's separated into three sections. The first being a thorough but brief introduction to all aspects of the API. The second section is an API reference. And the third a quick reference. This third section is included on the CD that comes with the book and will integrate into Visual Studio. Don't expect the first section of the book, which is an introduction to ADO.NET to give you a gentle introduction to the subject. That's not the Nutshell form. If you don't know ADO at all you will want to buy both this book and an introductory book. If you know related APIs, or you know ADO.NET and you need a refresher or have weak spots you will find some new things in the first section. For me it was the support for disconnect access and also the integration with the XML features of SQL Server 2000. Although this book stays true to the Nutshell form it is a little longer in the introduction than the usual. The introductory section is seventeen chapters and is almost half of the length of the book. So if you are an intermediate or advanced engineer I think you could probably learn enough ADO directly from this book without any other introductory book. |
Some information above was provided using data from Amazon.com. View at Amazon > |
| |
|
|