Saturday, January 10, 2009

C 30 Pocket Reference 2nd Edition or HTML

C# 3.0 Pocket Reference, 2nd Edition

Author: Joseph Albahari

This book is for busy programmers who want a succinct and yet readable guide to C# 3.0 and LINQ. C# 3.0 Pocket Reference tells you exactly what you need to know, without long introductions or bloated samples. Despite its conciseness, this book doesn't skimp on depth or detail, and embraces the conceptual challenges in learning C# 3.0 and LINQ. Tightly focused and highly practical, this pocket reference covers more ground than many of the big books on C#. C# 3.0 Pocket Reference includes plenty of illustrations and code examples to explain: Features new to C# 3.0, such as lambda expressions, anonymous types, automatic properties, and more All aspects of C# syntax, predefined types, expressions, and operators Creating classes, structs, delegates and events, enums, generics and constraints, exception handling, and iterators The subtleties of boxing, operating overloading, delegate covariance, extension method resolution, interface reimplementation, nullable types, and operating lifting LINQ, starting with the principles of sequences, deferred execution and standard query operators, and finishing with a complete reference to query syntax-including multiple generators, joining, grouping, and query continuations Consuming, writing, and reflecting on custom attributes

You'll also find chapters on unsafe code and pointers, preprocessor directives, XML documentation, and a framework overview. If you're already familiar with Java, C++, or an earlier version of C#, C# 3.0 Pocket Reference is an ideal choice. No other book or online resource can get you up to speed so quickly.



Interesting textbook: Household Dynamics or Managing Egypts Poor and the Politics of Benevolence 1800 1952

HTML: A Beginner's Guide

Author: Wendy Willard

HTML made easy--fully updated for the latest version

The new edition of this bestselling beginner's guide brings the book up to date with the latest changes in HTML, including XHTML 2.0. In dedicated modules that act as stand-alone lessons, you will learn how to structure a page, place images, size text, create links, generate Web-safe colors, work with multimedia, and more. Hands-on projects, self-assessments, and ‘ask the expert' sections make it easy to learn the essential skills.

Wendy Willard is a freelance designer, consultant, writer, and educator who has been involved in Web design and development for more than 10 years.



Table of Contents:
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Pt. IHTML Basics
1Getting Started3
2Basic Page Structure21
3Color45
4Working with Text57
5Working with Links101
6Working with Images133
7Working with Multimedia175
8Creating Lists199
9Using Tables221
10Developing Frames281
11Employing Forms311
Pt. IIBeyond HTML
12Creating Your Own Web Graphics355
13Web Content383
14JavaScript393
15Making Pages Available on Others413
App. AMastery Check Answers437
App. BHTML 4.01 Reference Table465
App. CTroubleshooting (FAQ)483
App. DSpecial Characters495
App. EFile Types501
Index505

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