Summary

   

This chapter has covered a lot of ground, from variables to branch statements, loops, and functions. These become part of a good tool box for you to have when trying to build your ASP.NET applications.

What has been presented is by no means exhaustive. If it were, it would have to contain the full SDK which is around 110 megabytes of data. I have given you a base understanding of many of the common skills you'll need. As you move on and venture out to build your own application, you will build on these techniques and probably throw a zillion compiler errors in the process. Pushing through this and forcing yourself to learn ASP.NET is the process that will make you a better code writer, and it is all part of the fun of creating ASP.NET applications.

Now that you've been through this chapter, I think you have seen enough code examples to shake a stick at. You've seen the looser but more wordy nature of Visual Basic .NET and the more concise but more critical side of C#. You will have plenty of opportunity to see more examples through the book.

Next, we're going to be looking deep into the nooks and crevasses of ASP.NET pages. We'll see how they differ from typical HTML pages and explore the fact that in ASP.NET, even the page is…you guessed it an object!


   
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ASP. NET for Web Designers
ASP.NET for Web Designers
ISBN: 073571262X
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2005
Pages: 94
Authors: Peter Ladka

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