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.NET Technologies
Advanced Visual Basic .NET Programming
This 5-day hands-on workshop is a direct follow-up to "Introduction to .NET
and Visual Basic .NET Programming." It covers advanced features of the
VB.NET language, such as delegates, events, multithreading, attributes,
reflection, and dealing with memory management. In addition, students will
explore how to use VB.NET to develop enterprise-level applications within the
.NET environment: from accessing data through ADO.NET and XML processing classes
to building Web applications with ASP.NET and Web Services; and from
interoperating with legacy DLL and COM components to taking advantage of current
COM+ enterprise services. Lastly, the class takes a look at specific
performance-monitoring and security features that .NET provides. Throughout the workshop, the instructor will discuss issues of performance, design, and best
practices as they relate to the various topics presented.
Students will have the opportunity to utilize their new skills with many
hands-on exercises using Visual Studio .NET.
Who Should Attend
This workshop is aimed at VB.NET developers who are ready to explore advanced
features of the language and start developing enterprise-level applications and
components.
Prerequisites
Students should have experience with VB.NET and .NET equivalent to the
information covered in "Introduction to .NET and Visual Basic .NET
Programming." This workshop's first-chapter review of beginning-level topics
will not be sufficient for learning the necessary material thoroughly enough.
Workshop Objectives:
- Learn about issues related to memory management.
- Build multithreaded applications with synchronized code.
- Write event-driven code using events and delegates.
- Incorporate DLLs and COM components into .NET programs and vice versa.
- Take advantage of COM+ Enterprise Services.
- Access relational databases and process XML data from VB.NET code.
- Build Web applications using ASP.NET and .NET Web Services.
- Monitor the performance of your code.
- Implement a variety of security measures.
To request a comprehensive
curriculum outline click... HERE.
Last updated on
April 30, 2008
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