Part IV, Internet and Networking

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Sockets form the underlying layer of network programming. Chapter 15, "Network Programming with Sockets," looks at different ways of programming sockets as well as discusses methods to formulate your own communication protocol. Some of the advanced techniques include accessing data through a proxy server and performing asynchronous Web transfers.

The successor to Active Server Pages (ASP), ASP.NET transforms dynamic Web pages into feature-laden Web applications. In Chapter 16, "ASP.NET," you will see techniques demonstrating everything from creating, manipulating, and responding to Web Forms to specific techniques explaining how to control page output caching and saving session state.

Web Services bring the notion of remote applications as a service to the programming world. Comprising standard protocols, XML-centric data, and programming language independence, Web Services facilitate data sharing across network boundaries. Chapter 17, "Web Services," explores the vast support for Web Services provided by Visual C# .NET and Visual Studio .NET 2003.

In the past, communication between disparate objects across a network was a lesson in perseverance for most developers. Remoting in the .NET Framework was created not only to make this communication much easier but also to provide great flexibility and power for creating distributed applications. Chapter 18, "Remoting," covers various aspects of remoting, including server-activated singleton objects and custom channel sinks for logging.

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Microsoft Visual C# .Net 2003
Microsoft Visual C *. NET 2003 development skills Daquan
ISBN: 7508427505
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2003
Pages: 440

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