Learning to Program in Visual C# 2005 Training
How To Take This Class:
- Live Instructor-Led Online Class > View Schedule or Register
- Onsite Group Training > Request Pricing
Instructor-Led Online Course Tuition:
$2,250.00Course Duration:
3 Days
Course Description:
In this Learning to Program in Visual C# 2005 Training course, students will learn to use Visual Studio 2005 to explore the Visual C# 2005 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, students will learn all the language features needed in order to create full-featured Web or Windows applications that make best use of the .NET platform. Students will learn about data types, variables, and operators, along with all the important flow control structures. Students will work through several examples demonstrating the power of the .NET Framework, and dig into creating and consuming their 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. By the end of this course, students will understand the important basic concepts that will allow them to start creating the applications they need.
Course Objectives:
Upon successful completion of this course, students will be able to:
- Build and debug applications using Visual Studio 2005.
- Create and use variables, operators, and data types.
- Find and use the classes you need within the .NET Framework.
- Manage flow control within your code, branching and looping as needed.
- Create and consume classes and objects.
- Add and consume properties and methods in your classes.
- Make use of .NET’s object-oriented features, such as overloading, inheritance and interfaces.
- Store, retrieve, and manipulate multiple values using arrays.
- Work with .NET 2.0’s generics.
- Make best use of the .NET Framework’s support for collection classes.
- Handle exceptions in your code.
- Create and use delegates, and understand how they relate to events.
Course Audience:
This course is designed for students who may or may not have prior programming experience and are interested in learning the Visual C# language within Visual Studio 2005.
Course Prerequisites:
This course assumes that students have some programming background. No specific experience with Visual Studio 2005 or the .NET Framework is required. As with any such course, the more experience a student brings to the course, the more they will get out of it. This course moves quickly through a broad range of programming topics, but it does not require any prior .NET skills.
Course Syllabus:
- Getting Started with .NET
- Thinking about .NET
- Using Visual Studio 2005
- Debugging Your and Handling Exceptions
- Data Types and Variables
- Introducing Variables and Data Types
- Working with Variables and Data Types
- Using the .NET Framework
- Using .NET Framework Classes
- Working with Strings
- Working with Dates and Times
- The My Namespace
- Branching and Flow Control
- Conditional Branching
- Repeating Code Blocks
- Unconditional Branching
- Classes and Objects
- Introducing Objects and Classes
- Creating Your Own Classes
- Working with Classes
- Properties and Methods
- Overview of Properties and Methods
- Properties
- Methods
- Object-Oriented Techniques
- Inheritance
- Interfaces
- Organizing Classes
- Working with Arrays
- Introducing Arrays
- Manipulating Arrays
- Delegates and Events
- Motivating Delegates
- Introducing Delegates
- Working with Events
- Generics
- Introducing Generics
- Generics and Arrays
- Generic Constraints
- Generics and Lists
- Handling Exceptions
- Perspectives on Exception Handling
- Getting Started with Exception Handling
- Catching Specific Exceptions
- Raising Errors
- Running Code Unconditionally
- Creating Exception Classes
- Collection Classes
- Generics, Collections, and Interfaces
- The Generic List
- Working with Dictionaries, Stacks, and Queues
- Creating Your Own Generic Collection Classes



