by JohnRobbins (Author)
You get huge development advantages with Microsoft Visual Studio .NET 2003-but you need a new bag of debugging tricks to take full advantage of them in today's .NET and Win32 development worlds. Learn lethally effective, real-world application debugging techniques for .NET Framework 1.1 and Windows with this fully updated programming guide. Debugging expert John Robbins expands the first edition of his classic debugging book with all-new scenarios and bug-killing tools, tips, and techniques. You'll see every .NET and Windows debugging scenario here-from XML Web services and Microsoft ASP.NET to Windows services and exceptions. Along with John's expert guidance, you get more than 6 MB of his battle-tested source code-for the tools and tactics you need to ship better software faster!
Topics covered include:
CD-ROM features:
Format: Paperback
Pages: 848
Edition: 2
Publisher: Microsoft Press
Published: 02 Apr 2003
ISBN 10: 0735615365
ISBN 13: 9780735615366
John Robbins is a co-founder of Wintellect, a .NET and Windows consulting and education firm. Wintellect's mission is to help companies ship better software faster using any Microsoft platform. He concentrates on the emergency debugging and consulting aspects of the business. John also teaches other developers how to better debug so they can solve their development problems faster with his course Debugging Applications. John has worked on debugging or tuning a wide range of applications from companies such as eBay, Microsoft, and AutoDesk, as well as many corporate development shops. In addition to writing both editions of Debugging Applications, John is a contributing editor to MSDN Magazine where he writes the popular Bugslayer column. Before founding Wintellect, John was one of the first engineers at NuMega Technologies (now Compuware Corporation) where he was a key player in designing, developing and managing many of the most-used and award-winning developer tools in the C/C++, Microsoft Visual Basic, and Java marketplace. Prior to stumbling into software development in his late 20s, John was a paratrooper and Green Beret in the United States Army. Since he no longer gets the same adrenaline high that he used to jumping out of airplanes in the middle of the night onto an unlit, postage-stamp-size drop zone with a full combat load, he rides motorcycles at high rates of speed--much to his wife's chagrin.