Features
- Cover Type: Paperback with 416 pages
- Published by: Apress June 20, 2006
- Written in: English
- ISBN 10 Number: 1590596811
- ISBN 13 Number: 978-1590596814
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Book Dimensions:
9 x 7 x 1.2 inches
- Weighs: 1.4 pounds
Product Description
Are you tasked with creating and maintaining a web presence? Do you suspect that there is a better way to manage business internally?
Beginning DotNetNuke 4.0 Website Creation in C# 2005 with Visual Web Developer 2005 Express is for you. It leads you through the emerging world of web portals by applying the most easy to use and current development software, like C# Express and the powerful, flexible DotNetNuke. You will learn to create the professional web presence your company needs.
The book takes you through the steps necessary to get an internal web portal running for employee use. If you have some programming experience and creativity, this book will help you expand your business presence in a short amount of time. It features simple explanations and proof-of-concept examples throughout. The book concludes with the creation of a web portlet that you can plug into an external website for a web presence.
About The Author
Nick Symmonds works for the Integrated System Solutions division of Ingersoll-Rand, developing and integrating security software. He started out his professional life as an electronics technician. While getting his bachelor's degree in electrical engineering from the University of Hartford, he started to gravitate toward programming. Nick has spent quite a few years programming in assembly, C, C++, and Visual Basic. Recently, he has latched onto .NET like a lamprey and loves digging into the .NET core. Nick has written several articles on programming and has three books currently out:
Internationalization and Localization Using Microsoft .NET (Apress, 2002),
GDI+ Programming in C# and VB .NET (Apress, 2002), and
Data Entry and Validation with C# and VB .NET Windows Forms (Apress, 2003). He lives with his family in the northwest hills of Connecticut and has recently become addicted to golf and road cycling. He also enjoys woodworking, hiking, and exploring the hills on his motorcycle.
Reader ReviewsWell. If someone is going to buy a book on DotNetNuke in C#, probably that person is very unlikely to need a basic intro on the language. So, the topic actually starts at page 143 (which on a ~370 pages book it almost means half of it). Regretfully, I bought it since it has a chapter on modules programming in C# (DotNetNuke uses VB, so I liked the possibility of using another language). Wrong, the initial instructions corrupted my configuration files and the chapter got confusing. I basically ended up closing the book, got the official DotNetNuke documentation and figure things out on my own. I could have saved forty dollars.