Soup to Nuts: Building Windows Forms Applications with .NET
Soup to Nuts: Building Windows Forms Applications with .NET
"Tune in and learn how to build Microsoft Windows Forms applications and Smart Clients in Microsoft .NET. We will take you through all the steps to build an application, as we cover object oriented concepts and delve deep into .NET. During this series of webcasts, you will learn how to create rich user interfaces, access data, and see industry-proven ways to get Windows Forms applications to market quickly. And after viewing the webcasts, you can work hands-on in the MSDN Virtual Lab...."
"Windows Application Development with .NET — Introduction and Essential Concepts — Level 100
User Interface Beauty Tips for Windows Forms Applications — Level 200
Taking Your Windows Forms Application Safely Through Configuration and Deployment to Production — Level 200
Taming the Giant: Managing Enterprise Applications and Large-Scale Development — Level 300
Keeping Threats at Bay—Securing Your Data and Applications with Microsoft .NET — Level 300
In-Depth ADO.NET—Advanced Data Access Techniques for the Power User — Level 400
Complex Problems, Elegant Solutions—Scenarios for the Advanced .NET Programmer — Level 400
+ more..."
Part 1...
"You hear it more and more these days: Microsoft Visual Studio® and the .NET Framework create the platform of choice for a wide range of challenging scenarios. Windows® Forms Applications provide a powerful and extensible solution to help you meet the challenges you face in development. Whether you're new to the subject or you're just looking to fill the gaps in your knowledge, you can't afford to miss David Anthony's top-notch 14-part series "Soup to Nuts - A Practical Guide to Building Windows Forms Applications with .NET." In this first webcast, you will learn background and general concepts behind Windows software development with .NET. We will introduce the .NET Framework and look at how to use the Visual Studio Integrated Development Environment (IDE)."
Adding this to my remote memory space so I can find it the next time I'm asked, "Do you have any good/free sites where I can learn .Net or to program?"
14 sessions, in a series, that appears to walk the watcher through building Windows.Net applications from start to finish.
Also it looks like each lab is linked to a MS Virtual Lab, so the watcher doesn't even need VS installed.
(via Jono's Blog - Windows Forms "Soup to Nuts" Webcast series)
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