.NET is in my opinion one of the simplest frameworks to learn to code in. With the Visual Studio SDK, you would hardly need a book, it's so to the point. All you need is to know what function does what and what properties are for what. Anything else would be from your pseudocode/flowcharts.

Good luck,

Me.

2009/6/2 aki <aki275@googlemail.com>
this is back! I've moved from books  and onto other books. Same story each time : not enough info or same method syntax that really is not what you want. All start with silly hallo world syntaxes that within a chapter or 2 is useless towards writing progs. Eg a good book I read so far ( IMHO ) is visual c# 2008 by John Sharp but by chapter 2 or 3 makes many assumptions. It is amazing how small the code portion becomes if you use correct method syntax and program flow. Why can't book writers use a standard convention of the best ways to write methods, then take it from there. A hallo world method with screen output has no place in this world! %^$%%!!!
 
Any online college or Uni offering a sane way to learn visual c# you could refer me to? Anyone... :-)
 
Rgds.

_______________________________________________
Skunkworks mailing list
Skunkworks@lists.my.co.ke
http://lists.my.co.ke/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/skunkworks
Other services @ http://my.co.ke
Other lists
-------------
Skunkworks announce: http://lists.my.co.ke/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/skunkworks-announce
Science - http://lists.my.co.ke/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/science
kazi - http://lists.my.co.ke/cgi-bin/mailman/admin/kazi/general




--
שִׁמְעוֹן