Prix bas
CHF38.50
Habituellement expédié sous 2 à 4 semaines.
Create professional database applications designed for local, network, or Internet deployment.
Auteur
F. Scott Barker holds a bachelor of science in computer science and has worked as a developer in the database field for more than 16 years, first with Clipper, and then with Visual Basic, SQL Server, and Microsoft Access for the past 10 years. Scott has already created and deployed a number of ASP.NET Web sites for his clients.
Working at Microsoft for two years, Scott was a member of the Microsoft Access and FoxPro teams. Since leaving, he has been a contractor with Microsoft developing in-house tools used throughout Microsoft. With his company, Applications Plus, Scott has also been doing contract development for many Fortune 500 companies, developing in ASP.NET, Visual Basic .NET, C#, Visual Basic/Access/Office, and SQL Server.
Scott has trained for Application Developers Training Company and others all around the U.S. and is a frequent speaker at Microsoft conferences throughout the U.S., Canada, South Asia, and Europe. Through his classes and conferences, Scott has trained thousands of developers.
Scott is a writer for a number of development magazines and is the author of F. Scott Barker's Microsoft Access 2002 Power Programming, published by Sams, and Access 97 Power Programming, published by Que.
Scott can be reached at his Web site at www.appsplus.com, or via e-mail at FSBarker@AppsPlus.com.
Résumé
Create professional database applications designed for local, network, or Internet deployment.
Contenu
Introduction.
1. Developing Windows Forms Using Bound Controls.
Create a Bound List Box. Limit the Data Displayed in a Bound List Box. Bind and View Individual Text Boxes Based Off a Selected List Box Item. Edit and Update Data Using Bound Controls. Add and Delete Records Using Bound Controls. Take Care of Error Handling with Bound Controls. Put the Finishing Touches on a Data Bound Form. Bind Data to ComboBox and DataGrid Controls. Drill Down to Data in the DataGrid Control.
2. Creating SQL Server Database Objects from Visual Studio .NET.
Create a New SQL Server Database from Within Visual Studio .NET. Define Tables and Fields. Define a Primary Key and Other Indexes. Define Relations Between Tables. Define Defaults and Constraints. Create Views. Create Stored Procedures.
3. Viewing Data with ADO.NET.
Retrieve Data by Using the DataReader Object. Retrieve Results from SQL Server by Using the DataTable Object. Locate Records with the DataTable Object. Filter and Sort Records Using the DataView Object.
4. Manipulating Data with ADO.NET.
Edit Data and Update Changes That Are Made to an ADO.NET DataSet Object. Add and Delete Rows in a Dataset with ADO.NET. Execute Parameterized Stored Procedures in ADO.NET. Create and Execute On-the-Fly Batch Updates by Using ADO.NET.
5. Working with Data in Web Forms.
Use Bound Controls with Web Form. Validate Data Using Validation Controls. Populate DropDown and ListBox Controls. Display Data Using the Table Control. Display Data Using the Repeater Control. Display, Sort, and Page Data in the DataGrid Control. Add, Edit, and Delete Data Using the DataGrid Control. Hyperlink from a Row in the Data Grid to a Detail Page.
6. Creating Transact-SQL Commands.
Retrieve Unique Records Using Only a Select Query. Use Variables and Functions in T-SQL. Use Wildcards and Ranges of Values in a SQL Query. Find Records in a Table Without Corresponding Entries in a Related Table? Take Advantage of Using Subqueries. Create, Modify, and Delete Tables. Create a New Table with Data from Existing Tables? Create and Call SQL Server 2000 User-Defined Functions.
7. Performing Common Database Tasks Using SQL-DMO.
Create a Dialog Box to Connect to a New Database, Including Listing Available SQL Servers and Databases. Back Up and Verify a SQL Server Database. Restore a SQL Server Database. Transfer Tables Between SQL Server Databases. Create a Detach/Attach SQL Server Database Dialog Box.
8. Taking Advantage of Data-Driven Techniques.
Work with Data-Bound Multi-Select List Boxes Using Windows Forms. Use a Single Windows Form to Update Multiple Lookup Tables. Create a Point-and-Click SQL Server Query Tool for Users Using a Windows Form. Make a Generic Search Form in a Visual Basic .NET Desktop Application. Work with Data-Bound Multi-Select List Boxes Using Web Forms. Use a Single Web Form to Update Multiple Lookup Tables. Create a Point-and-Click Query Tool for Users Using a Web Form. Make a Generic Search Form in an ASP.NET Web Application.
9. Using Classes with Databases to Make Life Easier.
Define a Class in Visual Basic .NET. Create a Class That Implements the Interface You Defined. Use Visual Studio .NET Tools to Speed Up Writing ADO.NET Code. Control the Creation and Behavior of Classes. Implement the Methods That Update the Database. Validate Data Passed to Properties and Communicate Errors to Developers. Write Data Validation Code That Can Be Reused in Other Classes.
10. Creating Reports Using Crystal Reports.
Create a Report Using Crystal Reports Report Expert. Display a Report That Was Created. Add Calculated Fields to the Crystal Reports Report. Select Whether the Report Will Be Displayed, Printed, or Exported Using Visual Basic .NET Code. Determine Which Records Will Be Printed at Runtime. Print Labels and Control the Order in Which Records Will Be Printed. Create an Onscreen Report That Contains Hyperlinks.
11. Managing SQL Server Security.
Create Windows NT/2000 Users. Create Windows NT/2000 Groups. Establish a Windows NT/2000 Authentication Mode. Establish Mixed-Mode Authentication. Create a Standard Login. Create a Windows NT/2000 Login. Use a Fixed Server Role. Create a Database User Account. Use Statement Permissions. Use Object Permissions. Use Fixed Database Roles. Create Custom Database Roles. Create Application Roles.
12. Utilizing XML Data in Your Visual Basic .NET Applications.
Use XMLWriter to Create an XML Document. Use XMLReader to Read an XML Document. Work with the XML Document Object Model. Retrieve XML from SQL Server 2000. Work with Datasets and XML.
13. Creating XML Web Services.
Get Started with XML Web Services. Create a Simple XML Web Service Using Parameters. Consume XML Web Services. Pass a Dataset Back from an XML Web Service.
Appendix A. Desktop Development with ADO.
When to Use ADO (Local Database/Single Tier Applications). Looking At the ADO Object Models. Referencing the Type Libraries. Using the Connection Object. Working with the ADO Recordset Object. Executing a SQL Server Stored Procedure By Using ActiveX Data Objects. Executing Batch Updates with ADO and SQL Server. Creating SQL Server Objects with ActiveX Data Objects. Conclusion.
Index. <B