6380 - Learning To Program Using VB.Net 2010
Course
6380
Price:
$2,795.00
Software Assurance Value:
Not Eligible
Duration:
5 Days
6380 - Learning To Program Using VB.Net 2010
Table of Contents
Introduction
At Completion
Prerequisites
Outline
Introduction
In this course, you'll learn to use Visual Studio 2010 to explore the Visual Basic language. The course starts with a quick overview of the .NET platform, examining assemblies, Microsoft Intermediate Language, Visual Studio profiles, XML comments, IntelliSense, and debugging. From there, you'll learn all the language features that you must internalize in order to create full-featured Web or Windows applications that make best use of the .NET platform. You'll learn about data types, variables, and operators, along with all the important flow control structures. You'll work through several examples demonstrating the power of the .NET Framework, and dig into creating and consuming your own classes and objects. The course moves on to working with data structures, such as arrays and collection classes, before finishing up with discussions of generics, handling exceptions and working with delegates and events. The course concludes by introducing the new LINQ-oriented features including anonymous types, lambda expressions, and more. By the end of this course, you will understand the important basic concepts that will allow you to start creating the applications you need.
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At Completion
After completing this course, students will be able to:
- Create Console Application projects in Visual Studio .NET 2010.
- Convert a variable from one data type to another.
- Work with dates and times.
- Repeat blocks of code using looping statements.
- Use methods in your classes.
- Control how derived classes inherit from base classes.
- Create classes containing arrays, adding support for indexers and enumerators.
- Use delegate types to provide flexibility and type safety.
- Create generic classes and methods.
- Use Exception objects to determine what error has occurred.
- Create your own custom collection classes.
- Use anonymous types, lambda expressions, extension methods, object initializers, and implicit type declarations.
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Prerequisites
TThis course assumes that students have some programming background. No specific experience with Visual Studio 2010 or the .NET Framework is required. As with any such course, the more experience you bring to the course, the more you'll get out of it. This course moves quickly through a broad range of programming topics, but it does not require any prior .NET skills.
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Outline
Getting Started
-
Learn the
advantages and architecture of the .NET Framework
-
Setup a
development profile in Visual Studio .NET
-
View the code that
Visual Studio generates and understand what it does
Data Types and Variables
-
Understand how to
create variables and assign values
-
Explore operators
and see how they can be used to change values and compare expressions
Using the .NET Framework
-
Using .NET
Framework classes
-
Explore basic file
IO operations
-
Learn how to work
with strings
Branching and Flow Control
-
Making choices
using conditional statements
-
Manage flow
control using branching statements
-
Break out of loops
when necessary
Classes and Objects
-
Investigate .NET
Framework classes to see how you can consume classes in your code
-
Learn about
properties, methods, and fields
-
Create instances
of classes using class constructors
-
Investigate class
details, including reference vs. value types, and more
Properties and Methods
-
Explore how to use
properties in your classes
-
Learn to control
how property values are set and retrieved
-
Understand how to
pass arguments to methods
-
Learn how to
return both simple and complex data types from methods
Object-Oriented Techniques
-
Understand how
derived classes inherit from base classes
-
Explore how to add
and modify members in derived classes
-
Understand how to
create and use interfaces
-
Explore techniques
for organizing your classes
Working with Arrays
-
Create and
initialize arrays
-
Work with array
methods and properties
-
Investigate arrays
in the .NET Framework
-
Learn techniques
for sorting arrays
Delegates and Events
-
Learn different
ways to work with delegates
-
Introduce
anonymous delegates
-
Learn how
delegates and events are related
-
Investigate events
and event handlers
Generics
-
Understand the
advantages and benefits of generics
-
Explore the use of
generics to sort and search in arrays
-
See how to use
generic interfaces and constraints
-
Explore the
generic List class
Handling Exceptions
-
Learn to use
try/catch blocks to handle runtime errors
-
Throw exceptions
back to procedure callers
-
Use the finally
block to run code unconditionally
-
Create and handle
user-defined exceptions
Collection Classes
-
Investigate the
collection interfaces in the System.Collections.Generic namespace
-
Create dynamically
sized arrays using the List class
-
Investigate the
generic SortedDictionary, SortedList, Stack, and Queue classes
LINQ
-
Motivate the need
for LINQ
-
Learn about the
various LINQ providers
-
Investigate simple
LINQ to Objects, LINQ to SQL, and LINQ to XML samples
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