4112 .NET Framework Using C#
Rev. 4.0.1
Microsoft .NET is an advance in programming technology that greatly
simplifies application development, both for traditional, proprietary
applications and for the emerging paradigm of Web-based services. .NET is a complete
restructuring of Microsoft’s whole system infrastructure and represents a major
learning challenge for programmers developing applications on Microsoft
platforms. Part of .NET is a major new object-oriented programming language,
C#. But learning the new programming language is only part of the challenge.
The much greater challenge is learning the .NET Framework and all its
capabilities.
This four-day course is designed to provide a sound introduction to
the .NET Framework for programmers who already know the C# language and the
fundamentals of Windows Forms. It is current to .NET 4.0 and Visual Studio 2010.
The course focuses on core portions of the .NET Framework that are common
across many application areas. Separate courses are available in specific
areas, such as ADO.NET, XML Programming, Windows Presentation Framework,
Windows Communications Framework and ASP.NET.
The course starts with an introduction to the architecture and key
concepts of .NET. It then discusses class libraries, assemblies, versioning, configuration,
and deployment, which constitute a major advance in the simplicity and
robustness of deploying Windows applications, ending the notorious “DLL hell.”
The next two chapters discuss important topics in the .NET programming model,
including metadata, reflection, I/O, and serialization. The following chapter
continues the discussion of the .NET programming model, covering memory
management, threading, asynchronous programming, application domains, marshal
by value, marshal by reference, and.NET remoting.
.NET Security, which was simplified in .NET 4.0, is introduced,
including both code access security and role-based security. The next chapter
covers interoperability of .NET with COM and with Win32 applications. The
course includes an introduction to database programming using ADO.NET and LINQ.
Finally, the .NET Framework diagnostic facilities are discussed in depth.
The course is practical, with many examples and a case study. The
goal is to equip you to begin building significant applications using the .NET
Framework. The student will receive a comprehensive set of materials, including
course notes and all the programming examples.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
·
Gain a thorough understanding of the philosophy
and architecture of .NET
·
Acquire a working knowledge of the .NET
programming model and .NET Security
·
Learn how to implement database applications
using ADO.NET and LINQ
·
Learn how to debug .NET applications using .NET
diagnostic classes and tools
Course Duration: 4
days
Prerequisites: The
student should be an experienced application developer or architect with a
working knowledge of C#, including building simple GUIs with Windows Forms.
1.
.NET Fundamentals
What is Microsoft .NET?
Common Language Runtime
Attribute-Based Programming
Interface-Based Programming
Metadata
Common Type System
Framework Class Library
Language Interoperability
Managed Code
Assemblies and Deployment
Web Services
ASP.NET
2.
Class Libraries
Components in .NET
Building Class Libraries at the Command Line
Class Libraries Using Visual Studio 2010
Using References
3.
Assemblies, Deployment and Configuration
Assemblies
Private Assembly Deployment
Shared Assembly Deployment
Configuration Overview
Configuration Files
Programmatic Access to Configuration
Using SDK Tools for Signing and Deployment
Application Settings
4.
Metadata and Reflection
Metadata
Reflection
Late Binding
5.
I/O and Serialization
Directories
Files
Serialization
Attributes
6.
.NET Programming Model
Memory Management and Garbage Collection
Threading and Synchronization
Asynchronous Delegates
BackgroundWorker
Application Domains
Marshal by Value
Marshal by Reference
.NET Remoting
7.
.NET Security
Authentication and Authorization
Code Access Security
Sandboxing
Permissions
Role-Based Security
Principals and Identities
8.
Interoperating with COM and Win32
.NET Client Calling a COM Server
PInvoke
9.
ADO.NET and LINQ
ADO.NET Overview
.NET Data Providers
Connections
Commands
DataReaders and Connected Access
Data Sets and Disconnected Access
Language Integrated Query
10. Debugging
Fundamentals
Compile-time Errors and Run-time Errors
Configuring Debug, Release, and Special Builds
Visual Studio 2010 Debugger
Just-In-Time Debugging
11. Tracing
Tracing
Event Logs
12. More
About Tracing
Using the BooleanSwitch and TraceSwitch Classes
Print Debugging Information with the Debug Class
Instrumenting Release Builds with the Trace Class
Using Listeners
Implementing Custom Listeners
System Requirements
Required software is Visual Studio 2010 and SQL Server 2008 Express
Edition (bundled with Visual Studio 2010). The operating system may be Windows
XP, Windows Vista or Windows 7. See the appropriate course Setup Guide for
details.
A good minimal hardware profile for this course consists of a 2 GHz
or better CPU, 1 GB of RAM, and at least 4 GB of free disk space for tools
installation and courseware.