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Programming ASP .NET
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Product Editions

Please consider the latest edition.

  1. Programming ASP.NET 3.5, Fourth Edition - October 2008
  2. Programming ASP.NET, Third Edition - October 2005
  3. Programming ASP.NET, Second Edition - September 2003
  4. Programming ASP .NET - February 2002
Description
The ASP.NET technologies are so complete and flexible; your main difficulty may lie simply in weaving the pieces together for maximum efficiency. Programming ASP.NET shows you how to do just that. Jesse Liberty and Dan Hurwitz teach everything you need to know to write web applications and web services using both C# and Visual Basic .NET.
Full Description
Table of Contents
  1. Chapter 1 ASP.NET and the .NET Framework

    1. The .NET Framework

    2. ASP.NET

  2. Chapter 2 Hello World

    1. The HTML Version

    2. The ASP Version

    3. Hello World the ASP.NET Way

    4. Hello World Using Visual Studio .NET

  3. Chapter 3 Events

    1. Event Model

    2. ASP Versus ASP.NET Events

    3. Event Arguments

    4. Application and Session Events

    5. Page and Control Events

    6. IsPostBack

    7. Postback Versus Non-Postback Events

    8. Comparing ASP.NET to ASP

  4. Chapter 4 Controls

    1. HTML Server Controls

    2. ASP (Web Server) Controls

  5. Chapter 5 ASP Control Details

    1. The Basics

    2. Label Control

    3. TextBox Control

    4. Button Controls

    5. HyperLink Control

    6. Selecting Values

    7. Selecting from a List

    8. Tables

    9. Panel Control

    10. Images

    11. Calendar

  6. Chapter 6 Programming Web Forms

    1. Code-Behind

    2. State

    3. Lifecycle

    4. Directives

    5. Using the IDE

  7. Chapter 7 Tracing, Debugging,and Error Handling

    1. Creating the Sample Application

    2. Tracing

    3. Debugging

    4. Error Handling

  8. Chapter 8 Validation

    1. The RequiredFieldValidator

    2. The Summary Validator

    3. The Compare Validator

    4. Range Checking

    5. Regular Expressions

    6. Custom Validation

  9. Chapter 9 Data Binding

    1. ArrayList

    2. Data Binding and Postback

    3. Binding to a Class

    4. Binding to Other Simple Controls

    5. Binding Radio Buttons and Checkboxes

  10. Chapter 10 List-Bound Controls, Part I

    1. Shared Properties and Collections

    2. The DataGrid Control

    3. Next Steps

  11. Chapter 11 Accessing Data with ADO.NET

    1. Bug Database Design

    2. The ADO.NET Object Model

    3. Getting Started with ADO.NET

    4. Managed Providers

    5. Creating a Data Grid

    6. Creating Data Objects by Hand

    7. Stored Procedures

  12. Chapter 12 ADO Data Updates

    1. Updating with SQL

    2. Updating Data with Transactions

    3. Updating Data Using Datasets

    4. Multiuser Updates

    5. Command Builder

  13. Chapter 13 List-Bound Controls, Part II

    1. Binding to the DataList and Repeater Controls

    2. The Repeater Control

    3. The DataList Control

    4. In-Place Editing

    5. DataList Editing

  14. Chapter 14 Custom and User Controls

    1. User Controls

    2. Custom Controls

  15. Chapter 15 Web Services Overview

    1. How Web Services Work

    2. Protocols and Standards

  16. Chapter 16 Creating Web Services

    1. A Simple StockTicker

    2. Creating a Discovery File

    3. Deployment

  17. Chapter 17 Consuming Web Services

    1. Discovery

    2. Creating the Proxy

    3. Creating the Consuming Application

  18. Chapter 18 Caching and Performance

    1. Types of Caching

    2. Output Caching

    3. Object Caching

    4. The HttpCachePolicy Class

    5. Performance

    6. Benchmarking and Profiling

  19. Chapter 19 Security

    1. Authentication

    2. Authorization

    3. Impersonation

  20. Chapter 20 Controlling, Configuring,and Deploying Applications

    1. What Is an Application?

    2. Controlling the Application

    3. Configuring the Application

    4. Deploying the Application

  1. Appendix A Relational Database Technology: A Crash Course

    1. Tables, Records, and Columns

    2. Table Design

    3. SQL

  2. Appendix B Bug Database Architecture

    1. Table Relationships

  3. Colophon

View Full Table of Contents
Product Details
Title:
Programming ASP .NET
By:
Jesse Liberty, Dan Hurwitz
Publisher:
O'Reilly Media
Formats:
  • Print
  • Safari Books Online
Print Release:
February 2002
Pages:
960
Print ISBN:
978-0-596-00171-1
| ISBN 10:
0-596-00171-1
Customer Reviews
About the Authors
  1. Jesse Liberty

    Jesse Liberty is the best selling author of Programming ASP.NET, Programming C#, and a dozen other books on web and object oriented programming. He is president of Liberty Associates, Inc., where he provides contract programming, consulting and on-site training in ASP.NET, C#, C++ and related topics. Jesse has been a Distinguished Software Engineer at AT&T and Vice President for technology development at CitiBank.

    View Jesse Liberty's full profile page.

  2. Dan Hurwitz

    Dan Hurwitz is the president of Sterling Solutions, Inc., where for nearly two decades he has been providing contract programming and database development to a wide variety of clients.

    View Dan Hurwitz's full profile page.

Colophon

Our look is the result of reader comments, our own experimentation, and feedback from distribution channels. Distinctive covers complement our distinctive approach to technical topics, breathing personality and life into potentially dry subjects. The animal on the cover of Programming ASP.NET is a stingray. The stingray is a cartilaginous fish, distinguished from other types of rays by the saw-edged, venomous spines that adorn its whip-like tail. Stingrays have flat, disk-shaped bodies without distinct heads. They have well-developed pectoral fins, which undulate to propel their bodies through the water. Stingrays' eyes are on the top sides of their bodies, while their mouths are on their undersides. Because of this, they cannot see what they are eating and sometimes leave "hickeys" on scuba divers.

Stingrays live in shallow bays, sounds, and in-shore waters with sandy bottoms. They usually keep to the ocean floor and will flatten themselves against the ground to hide from predators. Despite their venomous tail spines, stingrays are not aggressive and will flee from danger whenever possible. They feed on mollusks, crustaceans, and some types of small fish. Sharks often prey on them, even though the two are closely related. Catherine Morris was the production editor for Programming ASP.NET. Jane Ellin, Sue Willing, and Catherine Morris were the proofreaders . Emily Quill, Judy Hoer, and Claire Cloutier provided quality control. David Chu, Julie Flanagan, Matt Hutchinson, and Darren Kelly provided production assistance. Judy Hoer wrote the index.

Emma Colby designed the cover of this book, based on a series design by Edie Freedman. The cover image is a 19th-century engraving from the Dover Pictorial Archive. Emma Colby produced the cover layout with QuarkXPress 4.1 using Adobe's ITC Garamond font.

David Futato designed the interior layout. Mihaela Maier converted the files from Microsoft Word to FrameMaker 5.5.6 using tools created by Mike Sierra. The text font is Linotype Birka; the heading font is Adobe Myriad Condensed; and the code font is LucasFont's TheSans Mono Condensed. The illustrations that appear in the book were produced by Robert Romano and Jessamyn Read using Macromedia FreeHand 9 and Adobe Photoshop 6. The tip and warning icons were drawn by Christopher Bing. This colophon was written by Linley Dolby.

  • Book cover of Programming ASP .NET