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first of all very thank for any one who can help me ,
I Want to Learn c# in from 1 to 3 days or learn Fundamentals in C# is there any book as a pdf or any
book like that to help me.
thanks,
amira
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There are various boooks, online tutorials on google and mostly useful resource is www.codeproject.com, you can get answer for anything. I would say it's the best.
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Thanks netJP2L Very Much but can you give me book name online good can i depend on it because i am new
in c# and i do not no which book is good or give me a link of good tutorials.
thanks
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First I'd like to stress that learning C# in 3 days or even 3 months is impossible. Yes you can grasp the very basics within a short time depending on your wits, but you just can't be a programmer in a "nutshell" as they say. Programming is highly depending on experience and long nights of reading and coding. The more you read books/write code, the better programmer you get.
Also the choice would be highly dependable on your programming backgrounds. If you know C++, data structure, logic, etc... this would help alot. I mean; Do you want to learn C# basics, or programming basics in C#? If you don't have any programming experience this would take one more step.
Anyway, to make things short. I'd highly recommend Deitel's "How to program in C#" book. It's a bit large, but it has the fundamentals -and not more than fundamentals by the way- that you are looking for. You can skip some chapters though if you are interested in windows development only.
About online sources there are few good video tutorials -free and purchasable videos- that I'd recommend. Some links would be below:
http://www.learnvisualstudio.net/[^]
Microsoft's video series[^]
Interesting links:
101 samples for C#[^]
Some searching links are also below.
A small Google search[^]
Another Google search[^]
PS.
Sounds like you are stuck in your term project. Am I right?;)
Regards
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Very Very Very Very Thanks Nader for your reply , that i can say to u.
really i bought c# how to program and the cd i read from the book but it is 1558 pages and when i want to practice in the end in the ch , it has no answer to know i answer the code right or worng i search in the internet i did not found any answers!!!!!!!!!!!!
there was no answers no in the book or in the cd.
really i disappointed
( (
thanks nader
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I know this was mean, but they have put the answers in a separate book -that you obviously have to buy also-, that is called:
"The Complete C# Programming Training Course"
ISBN: 0130645869
"Includes C# How to Program and the C# Programming Multimedia Cyber Classroom (interactive CD ROM)
[NOTE: This product contains solutions to approximately half the exercises in C# How to Program; it also includes audio walkthroughs of the code examples in the text.]"
Here is the cover image[^].
PS.
Please don't be offended, but you got to improve your searching skills. I got that info in a 5 minutes search on google. Click here[^] and see first and second hits.
You are also welcome anytime you ask.
Regards
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Thanks agin for your reply nader but did u know any site that can i download this answers book from
it plz,i also find the book C# how to program on the net as a pdf file but i did not find the answers
(
thanks
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Sorry! These books are copyrighted, and you won't find them easy on the net as pdfs. And if you do copying them would be illegal by the way.
Yet you may search for forums where people had answered some of the questions by searching for a phrase in the question.
Still if you are stuck in something specific in the exercises, post here.
Regards
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1 to 3 days? LOL.
Dude... It took me like half a month to learn DOS Batch scripting, which is like as easy as it can get... I think C# is very good for beginners, you don't need to know all that memory management crap in C++ (not saying it's not useful, just not easy... I'm still struggling with it) and most of the stuff is already done for you, so it's less coding and it takes less to make a proggy.
Windows Calculator told me I will die at 28.
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amirafouad21 wrote: I Want to Learn c# in from 1 to 3 days
means 24 hrs to 72 hrs, its horrible to me.
Well try this[^] link too.
Best of Luck
________________________________
Success is not something to wait for, its something to work for.
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Is that one whole day to 3 whole days?
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Is there a string method or some method in general that will allow me to read one character at a time from a string? I need to read a word and/or characters that is contained within single quotes from a string like this: "This is the 'message'". I need to extract the word message from the string. I tried using the split method, but I can't seem to be able to pass in a single quote as the delimiter. Thanks for any help.
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Treat the string as an array of characters iterating from 0 to the string length.
-----------------------------
In just two days, tomorrow will be yesterday.
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This is how you specify a single quote character: '\''
Luc Pattyn
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This regular expression might be helpful:
Regex myReg = new Regex("'.*'");<br />
DestinationString = myReg.Match(SourceString).Value;
I'd like to help but I don't feel like Googling it for you.
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Hi,
I have a .NET application which makes a call to 3rd party(Vertex) COM+ API's which requires to pass DSN Data source name, Database, userid, pwd to make a connection. I created a DSN data source manually now and everything works fine. I need to have this done programmatically to give as setup project
Question:
1. I need to create a setup project to create a ODBC User DSN like how u would do manually by going to Administrative Tools-->ODBC-->User DSN
2. I need to create a set up project to create a COM+ application project and register the COM+ API's. Currently, I have done this manually by going to
Component Services-->Computers-->My Computer-->COM+ Applications-->(New Project) and have registered.
Any help will be greatly appreciated.
Thanks
Bala
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Q1: SQLConfigDataSource Function [^]
Q2: Sorry I can't help with this one...never done it myself, but you should be able to find an answer here: MSDN Enhanced Search[^]
--EricDV Sig---------
Some problems are so complex that you have to be highly intelligent and well informed just to be undecided about them.
- Laurence J. Peters
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Thanks Eric. Will post the solution if I get the second question done.
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Dear Friends:
How to draw graphics with real world dimension accuracy on different screens? For example, I want to draw a line to be one inch long (real dimension that can be measured with a ruler) on different resolution display screens? The code should result in the same one-inch long line on different size and different resolution display screens. Thanks!
Gshen
Sheng
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Dear Ravi:
Thanks for your information!
The Graphics.DpiX and DpiY do not change with the size of the monitor screen. For example, A 17-inch monitor with 1280*1024 resolution and a 19-inch monitor with 1280*1024 resolution all have Graphics.DpiX and DpiY 96 dots/inch. If you divide the resolution by DpiX or DpiY, they result in the same inch dimension. But the real size of the 17-inch and 19-inch are different.
I guess the DpiX or similar paramter must be screen size and resolution dependent in order to accurately control the real physical dimension on the display screen.
Thanks!
Sheng
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Good point. Perhaps the section "Coordinate Systems" on this[^] page will help? Sorry, I haven't hacked much GDI code using .NET.
/ravi
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Have a look to Graphics.PageUnit property, some of its allowed values (Millimeter , Document which is 1/300 of inch) seem promising...
If the Lord God Almighty had consulted me before embarking upon the Creation, I would have recommended something simpler.
-- Alfonso the Wise, 13th Century King of Castile.
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Hi,
to provide an acurate display, the operating system needs to know the resolution of your monitor.
For MS Windows (XP and others) the default value is set to 96 dpi, which used to be a good
average value before, but may be well below the actual value for a modern monitor.
The theoretical value you need equals the length of your monitor's diagonal in pixels
(this is the square root of horpixels squared plus vert pixels squared !) divided by
same diagonal's length in inches (14, 15, 17, 19, whatever).
Examples: 17 inch monitor with 1280*1024 pixels gives SQRT(1280*1280+1024*1024)/17 = 96.4 dpi !
but 15 inch monitor with 1400*1050 pixels gives 116.7 dpi
To change the setting: right-click the desktop, choose Display Properties, click Advanced button, and look for the DPI Settings combobox. The custom setting is expressed in % not in dpi,
so whatever you calculated you should multiply by 100/96 to get the right percentage.
Warning: if you never cared before, and now increase the dpi setting, every item on your
desktop will become smaller, but it is a required step to get acurate dimensions.
Remark: to counteract the reduction of font sizes, you can ask Windows to use larger fonts
on the desktop (see Display Properties, Appearance, Font size); you can also ask it to use
larger icons...
Luc Pattyn
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