 |

 |
 |
 |
 |

Programming with the Microsoft .NET Framework (Visual C# .NET)
Five days; Instructor-led
Introduction
The goal of this course is to help application developers understand the
Microsoft® .NET Framework. In addition to offering an overview of the .NET
Framework and an introduction to key concepts and terminology, the course
provides a series of labs, which introduce and explain .NET Framework features
that are used to code, debug, tune, and deploy applications.
Audience
This course is intended for experienced, professional software developers
including those employed by independent software vendors or those who work on
corporate enterprise development teams. Most students will be Microsoft Visual
C++® (or C++) and Java developers.
At Course Completion
At the end of the course, students will be able to:
- List the major elements of the .NET Framework and explain how they fit into
the .NET platform.
- Explain the main concepts behind the common language runtime and use the
features of the .NET Framework to create a simple application.
- Create and use components in Windows Forms-based and ASP.NET-based
applications.
- Use the deployment and versioning features of the .NET runtime to deploy
multiple versions of a component.
- Create, use, and extend types by understanding the Common Type System
architecture.
- Create classes and interfaces that are functionally efficient and
appropriate for given programming scenarios.
- Use the .NET Framework class library to efficiently create and manage
strings, arrays, collections, and enumerators.
- Use delegates and events to make an event-sender object signal the
occurrence of an action to an event-receiver object.
- Describe and control how memory and other resources are managed in the .NET
Framework.
- Read from and write to data streams and files.
- Use the basic request/response model to send and receive data over the
Internet.
- Serialize and deserialize an object graph.
- Create distributed applications by means of XML Web services and Object
Remoting.
Prerequisites
Before attending this course, students should be experienced professional
software developers and have a basic understanding of the C# language.
Students can meet the C# language prerequisite by taking Course 2124, Introduction to C#
Programming for the Microsoft .NET Platform.
Student Materials
The student kit includes a comprehensive workbook and other necessary
materials for this class.
Course Outline
Module 1: Overview of the Microsoft .NET Framework
The following topics are covered in this module:
- Overview of the Microsoft .NET Framework
- Overview of Namespaces
After completing this module, you will be able to list the major elements of
the .NET Framework. This includes:
- Describing the .NET Framework and its components.
- Explaining the relationship between the .NET Framework class library and
namespaces.
Module 2: Introduction to a Managed Execution Environment
- Writing a .NET Application
- Compiling and Running a .NET Application
After completing this module, you will be able to explain the main concepts
behind the common language runtime and use the features of the common language
runtime to create a simple application. This includes:
- Creating simple console applications in C#.
- Explaining how code is compiled and executed in a managed execution
environment.
- Explaining the concept of garbage collection.
Module 3: Working with Components
The following topics are covered in this module:
- An Introduction to Key .NET Framework Development Technologies
- Creating a Simple .NET Framework Component
- Creating a Simple Console Client
- Creating an ASP.NET Client
After completing this module, you will be able to create and use components
in Windows Form-based and ASP.NET-based applications. This includes:
- Creating a simple .NET Framework component in C#.
- Implementing structured exception handling.
- Creating a simple .NET Framework console application that calls a component.
- Creating a .NET Framework client application by using the Windows Forms
library.
- Creating an ASP.NET page that uses the previously developed .NET Framework
component to create an ASP.NET application.
Module 4: Deployment and Versioning
The following topics are covered in this module:
- Introduction to Application Deployment
- Application Deployment Scenarios
- Related Topics and Tools
After completing this module, you will be able to use the deployment and
versioning features of the .NET common language runtime to deploy multiple
versions of a component. This includes:
- Packaging and deploying simple and componentized applications.
- Creating strong-named assemblies.
- Installing and removing assemblies from the global assembly cache.
- Configuring applications to control binding based on assembly location and
version data.
Module 5: Common Type System
The following topics are covered in this module:
- An Introduction to the Common Type System
- Elements of the Common Type System
- Object-Oriented Characteristics
After completing this module, you will be able to create, use, and extend
types. This includes:
- Describing the difference between value types and reference types.
- Explaining the purpose of each element in the type system, including values,
objects, and interfaces.
- Explaining how object-oriented programming concepts, such as abstraction,
encapsulation, inheritance, and polymorphism, are implemented in the Common Type
System.
Module 6: Working with Types
The following topics are covered in this module:
- System.Object Class Functionality
- Specialized Constructors
- Type Operations
- Interfaces
- Managing External Types
After completing this module, you will be able to create classes and
interfaces that are functionally efficient and appropriate for given programming
scenarios. This includes:
- Applying attributes to control visibility and inheritance in classes and
interfaces.
- Creating and using interfaces that define methods and properties.
- Explaining how boxing and unboxing work and when boxing and unboxing occur.
- Using operators to determine types at run time and to cast values to
different types.
- Explaining what features are available to work with unmanaged types, such as
COM types.
Module 7: Strings, Arrays, and Collections
The following topics are covered in this module:
- Strings
- Terminology - Collections
- .NET Framework Arrays
- .NET Framework Collections
After completing this module, you will be able to use the .NET Framework
class library to create and manage strings, arrays, collections, and
enumerators. This includes:
- Parsing, formatting, manipulating, and comparing strings.
- Using the classes in the System.Array and System.Collections namespaces.
- Improving the type safety and performance of collections by using
specialized collections and class-specific code.
Module 8: Delegates and Events
The following topics are covered in this module:
- Delegates
- Multicast Delegates
- Events
- When to Use Delegates, Events, and Interfaces
After completing this module, you will be able to use delegates and events to
have an event sender object signal the occurrence of an action to an event
receiver object. This includes:
- Using the delegate class to create type-safe callback functions and
event-handling methods.
- Using the event keyword to simplify and improve the implementation of a
class that raises events.
- Implementing events that conform to the .NET Framework guidelines.
Module 9: Memory and resource Management
The following topics are covered in this module:
- Memory Management Basics
- Non-Memory Resource Management
- Implicit Resource Management
- Explicit Resource Management
- Optimizing Garbage Collection
After completing this module, you will be able to describe and control how
memory and other resources are managed in the .NET Framework. This includes:
- Describing how garbage collection manages object memory.
- Implicitly managing non-memory resources by using a destructor's finalize
code.
- Explicitly managing non-memory resources by using client-controlled
deterministic release of resources.
- Writing code by using the temporary resource usage design pattern.
- Programmatically controlling the behavior of the garbage collection.
- Describing advanced garbage collection features.
Module 10: Data Streams and Files
The following topics are covered in this module:
- Streams
- Readers and Writers
- Basic File I/O
After completing this module, you will be able to read from and write to data
streams, files, and the Internet. This includes:
- Using Stream objects to read and write bytes to backing
stores, such as strings and files.
- Using BinaryReader and BinaryWriter
objects to read and write primitive types as binary values.
- Using StreamReader and StreamWriter
objects to read and write characters to a stream.
- Using StringReader and StringWriter
objects to read and write characters to strings.
- Using Directory and DirectoryInfo objects
to create, move, and enumerate through directories and subdirectories.
- Using FileSystemWatcher objects to monitor and react to
changes in the file system.
- Explaining the key features of the.NET Framework's isolated storage
mechanism.
Module 11: Internet Access
The following topics are covered in this module:
- Internet Application Scenarios
- The WebRequest and WebResponse Model
- Application Protocols
- Handling Errors
- Security
- Best Practices
After completing this module, you will be able to use the .NET Framework
classes to work with data over the Internet. This includes:
- Using the basic request/response model to send and receive data over the
Internet.
- Using the System.Net classes to communicate with other
applications by using the Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP), Transmission
Control Protocol (TCP), User Datagram Protocol (UDP), and Socket Internet
protocols.
Module 12: Serialization
The following topics are covered in this module:
- Serialization Scenarios
- Serialization Attributes
- Object Graph
- Serialization Process
- Serialization Example
- Deserialization Example
- Custom Serialization
- Custom Serialization Example
- Security Issues
After completing this module, you will be able to serialize and deserialize
an object graph. This includes:
- Writing an application that serializes and deserializes an object graph by
using either a binary or Simple Object Access Protocol (SOAP) XML format.
Module 13: Remoting and XML Web Services
The following topics are covered in this module:
- Remoting
- Remoting Configuration Files
- XML Web Services
After completing this module, you will be able to create distributed
applications by means of XML Web services and Object Remoting. This includes:
- Writing and configuring distributed applications that use .NET Remoting.
- Creating an XML Web service by using Visual Studio .NET and ASP.NET.
- Consuming an XML Web service by using the Web Services Description Language
tool (Wsdl.exe).
|
 |
 |
 |
|
|
|
 |
|
 |
|