Answer the question
In order to leave comments, you need to log in
Is there a C# book that builds an application in the course of learning?
I already know the basics of C#, but now I want to not just learn a lot of theory in the language, combining with the practice of small examples per chapter, but a theoretical textbook, but in which with each chapter we create and improve the application and study interactions based on it.
Answer the question
In order to leave comments, you need to log in
Good afternoon.
I have a feeling there is no such book. Most books start with the basics, which are easier to deal with in console applications, and UI development is already WinApp, WPF, or Store applications. Yes, and many topics can not be considered within just one application, or something far-fetched will turn out ... Come up with a big task for yourself, start reading a good book on C #, and as you study different parts, try to apply what you are learning to your application. After reading the book, throw out everything you did before and try to do everything from scratch now ...
Do you want advice?
If you want to learn something, set a goal for yourself.
For example, when I realized that neither C# Wpf nor C# WinForms inspire me, I set myself the goal of writing a web version of home accounting on the web and C# Asp.Net MVC, installed it, configured it, and in a couple of months from scratch, without any knowledge of c#, asp.net, mvc, html, jquery linq and ms sql got a completely working prototype. By the way, the prototype became a member of MS BizSpark and now lives in Azure.
And during these months I have gained a lot of knowledge and a big plus in a programming resume, a field of which I am now even considered for a C# junior.
If anything - I'm 31 and I'm a system administrator with 16 years of experience and 10 years of experience in labor administration.
There are good books for the web:
www.amazon.com/ASP-NET-MVC-1-0-Website-Programming...
www.amazon.com/ASP-NET-MVC-Test-Driven-Development...
Didn't find what you were looking for?
Ask your questionAsk a Question
731 491 924 answers to any question