Friday, September 5, 2008

C sharp (C#) A great collection of C# ebooks

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C sharp (C#) A great collection of C# ebooks

C Sharp :
2004 :
Apress :

CSharp Threading Handbook.chm

Dissecting a C# Application Inside SharpDevelop 2004.pdf

Expert Service-Oriented Architecture in C# Using the Web Services Enhancements 2.0.pdf

Microsoft Press :

C# Language Specification.pdf

Oreilly :

C sharp Cookbook.chm

Sams :

Microsoft Visual CSharp Dot Net 2003 Unleashed.chm

Sams Teach Yourself the C# Language in 21 Days.pdf

various :
Course Technology PTR, Beginning C# Game Programming.pdf

Elsevier Inc, Network programming .NET with C# and VB.NET.pdf

The MIT Press, C# Precisely.pdf

Wiley :

Professional C#, Third Edition.pdf

2005 :

Apress :

Pro C# 2005 and the .NET 2.0 Platform.pdf

oreilly :

Programming C Sharp.chm

Visual C Sharp 2005 A Developer's Notebook.chm

Prentice Hall :

Core CSharp and .NET.chm

various :

Course Technology PTR, Beginning C# Game Programming.pdf

Elsevier Inc, C# 2.0 Practical Guide For Programmers.pdf

Thomson, Beginning C Sharp Game Programming.pdf


2006 :

Apress :

Expert C# 2005 Business Objects, Second Edition.pdf

Visual C# 2005 Recipes A Problem-Solution Approach.pdf

Oreilly :

Learning CSharp 2005, 2nd Edition.chm

wiley :

C Sharp 2005 for Dummies.pdf

Visual C Sharp 2005 Express Edition Starter Kit.pdf

Before :

Addison Wesley :

CSharp and dotNET Framework The C++ Perspective 2001.chm
CSharp Design Patterns A Tutorial 2002.chm

CSharp Developer's Guide to ASP.NET, XML, and ADO.NET 2002.chm

Essential Asp Net With Examples In CSharp 2003.chm

The C# Programming Language 2003.pdf

Windows Forms Programming in C# 2003.pdf

Apress :

A Programmer's Introduction to C# 2000.pdf

A Programmer’s Guide to ADO.NET in C# 2002.pdf
Advanced .NET Remoting CSharp Edition 2002.chm

CSharp Class Design Handbook Coding Effective Classes 2003.chm

Data Entry and Validation with C# and VB .NET Windows Forms 2003.pdf

Database Programming with C# 2002.pdf

Microsoft CSharp Programming for the Absolute Beginner.chm

User Interfaces in C# Windows Forms and Custom Controls 2002.pdf

Deitel :
C# How To Program 2001.pdf

Mcgraw Hill :

Advanced C# Programming 2002.pdf

Microsoft Press :

C# for Java Developers 2002.pdf

OOP with Microsoft Visual Basic .NET and Microsoft Visual C# Step By Step 2002.pdf

Programming Microsoft Windows with C# 2002.pdf


Oreilly :

Programming C#, 2nd Edition 2002.pdf

Prentice Hall :

Application Development Using CSharp and .NET 2001.chm

C# How To Program 2001.pdf


Sams :

Teach Yourself C# in 24 Hours 2002.pdf

Teach Yourself Microsoft Visual CSharp.NET 2003 In 24 Hours 2003.chm

Sybex :

CSharp Network Programming 2003.chm

Sybex , Mastering CSharp Database Programming 2003.chm

Sybex, Mastering ASP.NET with C# 2002.pdf

Sybex, Visual C# ASP.NET Programming 2002.pdf


various :

Charles River Media , Cross-Platform Web Services Using Csharp and Java 2003.chm

Course Technology PTR, Microsoft C# Programming For The Absolute Beginner 2002.pdf

Hungry Minds, C# Your visual blueprint for building .NET applications 2001.pdf

Hungry Minds, C# COM+ Programming 2001.pdf

Manning, Windows Forms Programming with C# 2002.pdf

Pearson, C# Primer A Practical Approach 2002.pdf
Premier Press, Microsoft C# Professional Projects 2002.pdf

Syngress, C# for Java Programmers 2002.pdf

Syngress, C#.net Web Developers Guide 2002.pdf

wiley :

C# Bible 2002.pdf

Professional C# Design Patterns Applied 2003.pdf

Professional CSharp, 2nd Edition 2002.chm

Code:
http://rapidshare.com/files/45858430/C_Sharp.part1.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/45860530/C_Sharp.part2.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/45862645/C_Sharp.part3.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/45864808/C_Sharp.part4.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/45867147/C_Sharp.part5.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/45856223/C_Sharp.part6.rar




******************************************************************

Apress - Pro Spring 2.5

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Apress - Pro Spring 2.5

TITLE : Pro Spring 2.5 (Books for Professionals by Professionals)
TYPE : Computer/Programming
AUTHOR : Jan Machacek / Jessica Ditt / Aleksa Vukotic / Anirvan Chakraborty
PUBLISHER : Apress
ISBN : 1590599217
PAGES : 920 pages
EDITION : 1st
LANGUAGE : ENGLISH
RELEASE DATE: 09/02/2008

RELEASE NOTES :
The Spring Framework 2.5 release reflects the state of the art in both the Spring Framework and enterprise Java frameworks as a whole. A guidebook to this critical tool is necessary reading for any conscientious Java developer.
— Rob Harrop, author of Pro Spring

The move from so–called heavyweight architectures, such as Enterprise JavaBeans, toward lightweight frameworks, like Spring, has not stopped since Pro Spring was published by Rob Harrop and Jan Machacek in 2005; in fact, it’s picked up pace. The Spring Framework remains the leader in this move and provides a platform on which you can build your own applications and services.

Pro Spring 2.5 covers the new features of Spring 2.5, but moreover, it is focused on the best practices and core standards of contemporary Spring development. As members of the Spring development team at Cake Solutions, the author team brings extensive practical experience gained from working with Spring since version 1.0 and delivering successful systems on top of it.

Learn the approaches that really matter in a professional, enterprise–level environment, so you can apply them to your projects today, safe in the knowledge that they just work.

What You’ll Learn

* Discover how to use Spring’s Inversion of Control (IoC).
* Explore Spring’s excellent aspect–oriented programming (AOP) support, including Spring 2.5’s new @AspectJ feature.
* Find out how to use Spring’s dynamic scripting language features, Spring design patterns, and performance tuning in Spring applications.
* Learn what really works in real–world Spring development.
* Understand Spring’s support for the JDBC framework, Hibernate, the Quartz enterprise scheduler, declarative transaction management, and much more.
* Master Spring’s well–designed MVC framework and add AJAX to your Spring web applications to create flexible, efficient, and manageable applications using the best techniques available.

Who is this book for?
Enterprise Java, J2EE/Java EE developers looking to learn and use the Spring metaframework, the now growing, leading alternative to J2EE/Java EE

About the Apress Pro Series
The Apress Pro series books are practical, professional tutorials to keep you on and moving up the professional ladder.

You have gotten the job, now you need to hone your skills in these tough competitive times. The Apress Pro series expands your skills and expertise in exactly the areas you need. Master the content of a Pro book, and you will always be able to get the job done in a professional development project. Written by experts in their field, Pro series books from Apress give you the hard-won solutions to problems you will face in your professional programming career.


Code:

http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/1590599217/


DOWNLOAD :

http://rapidshare.com/files/142328889/1590599217.rar

Building Websites with Joomla! 1.5

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Building Websites with Joomla! 1.5
This book takes a practical step-by-step approach of teaching the installation and configuration of Joomla! 1.5, customizing it, creating your templates and extensions, and finally, building your own website.

Read chapter 7: The Menus Menu [1.7 MB]

Book Reviews

Slashdot: ...from a technical perspective, the book offers a lot of valuable information to new Joomla developers, and could easily become the preferred resource that they turn to when building their first Joomla Web sites.

The Open Sourcery: this book is great for getting developers well-launched into using Joomla! managers will find it more than approachable and can use the book to give a sounding on the types of projects and extensions they may want to take with Joomla. Finally, basic users will get a clear idea of what Joomla can do for them - and a good gauge for how easy (or taxing) various configurations and customizations are going to be. In short, this is a book not just for getting started but also fully utilizing Joomla - top marks to Hagen Graf and Packt Publishing for this book.

dyndns.biz: The book is very complete. It is a real beginning to end piece that has great instructional value. I can see it easily implemented in workshops etc. Up to chapter 13 not much knowledge is needed. Chapter 13 to 15 require some experience with php/html to be completely understandable.


In Detail

Joomla! started as a fork from Mambo in 2005, when many of the original developers of the Mambo CMS moved to working on Joomla! It has rapidly grown in popularity and, according to its own description, is a "Cutting Edge Content Management System and one of the most powerful Open Source Content Management systems in the world. It is used world-wide for anything from simple homepages to complicated corporate websites. It is easy to install, easy to manage and very reliable."

While the Joomla! CMS has the flexibility and power needed for complex, full-featured web applications, it is also simple to use to create basic websites. Its powerful, extensible template system can deal many different data types and control of user access, approval of content, scheduling of content display, and rich administrative controls are all included.

Read the full Table of Contents for Building Websites with Joomla! 1.5
* Chapter 1: Terms, Concepts, and Deliberations
o Content Management System (CMS)
o A Quick Glance into History
+ Joomla!—How was it Developed?
o Structure of a Web Content Management System (WCMS)
+ Front End and Back End
+ Access Rights
+ Content
+ Extensions
# Components
# Templates
# Plug-Ins
+ Workflow
+ Configuration Settings
+ API
o Is Joomla! a Piece of Real Estate?
+ Joomla! Versions
+ Numbering System of Joomla! Versions
+ Road Map
o Changes In Detail
+ Internationalization
+ User Plug-Ins
+ XML Remote Procedure Call Support
+ Support of Several Databases
+ FTP System
+ Overhaul of the Joomla! Framework
+ Barrier Freedom
+ Search Engine Friendliness
+ Google Summer of Code Projects
o Joomla! Features
o Examples of Joomla! Pages
+ Joomla.org
+ Travel Shop, Ireland
+ Frank Lüdtke, Germany
+ Hotel Schönruh, Austria
+ Urth.tv, USA
+ unric.org, Europe
+ porsche.com.br, Brazil
o Summary



* Chapter 2: Installation
o Client-Server System
+ Accessing a Joomla! Website on the Internet
o Technical Requirements for Joomla!
o Necessary Elements for a Joomla! System Installation
+ Local Test Environment
# Windows Operating System
# Linux Operating System
# Mac OS X Operating System
+ Production Environment
# Rented Virtual Server
# Your Own Server
o Setting Up the Local Server Environment
+ Windows
# XAMPP for Windows
+ Linux
# openSUSE > 10.x
# Debian/Ubuntu
# Your Own Server at a Provider (Root Server)
o Joomla! Installation on a Virtual Server on the Net
o Joomla! Installation
+ Selecting a Directory for Installation
# An Example
# Directory
# Unpacking
+ Joomla! Web Installer
# Step 1: Language Selection
# Step 2: Pre-Installation Check
# Step 3: Licence
# Step 4: Database Configuration
# Step 5: FTP Configuration
# Step 6: Configuration
# Step 7: Completion
o Summary



* Chapter 3: A Tour of Your New Website
o Front End
+ Menus
# Top Menu
# Main Menu/Breadcrumbs
# Other Menus
+ Content
# What is Content?
# First Page/Front Page
# The Newest Information/The Most Often Read Messages
+ Advertising
# Banner Area
+ Functions
# Login Area
# Polling
# Who is Online?
# Feeds
# Search Field
+ Decorative Elements
+ Outlook
o Back end
o Summary



* Chapter 4: Customizing Joomla!—Language and Templates
o A Different Language for the Website and the Administrator
+ Installation of a Different Language File
+ Translation of a Menu Entry
+ Modifying the Menu Name
o Changing the Template for Your Website
+ Changing Colors in the Template
o Summary



* Chapter 5: Configuration of Joomla! Administration
o Screen Layout
+ Menu Bar
+ Tool Bar
+ Submenus
+ Filter Elements
+ Content Area
+ Lists
+ Dialogs
+ Miscellaneous
o Help
+ Help Icon
+ Help with Speech Balloons
o Help Menu
+ Joomla! Help
+ System Info
o Summary



* Chapter 6: Site Menu
o Control Panel
o User Manager
+ Logout Users Icon
+ Delete Users Icon
+ Edit Users Icon
+ New User Icon
o Media Manager
+ Creating Directories
+ Uploading a File
o Global Configuration
+ Site Section
# Site Settings
# Metadata Settings
# SEO (Search Engine Optimization) Settings
+ System Section
# System Settings
# Users Settings
# Media Settings
# Debug Settings
# Cache Settings
# Session Settings
+ Server Section
# Server Settings
# Locale Settings
# FTP Settings
# Database Settings
# Mail Settings
o Logout
o Summary



* Chapter 7: The Menus Menu
o Menus
o Customizing an Existing Menu
+ Menus Icon
+ Default Icon
+ Publish/Unpublish Icon
+ Move Icon
+ Copy Icon
+ Trash Icon
+ Edit Icon (Edit Menu Items)
+ New Icon
o Menu Trash
o Creating a New Menu
o Summary



* Chapter 8: Content Menu
o Article Manager
+ Description of the Articles List
+ Editing Icons for an Article
# Archive, Unarchive
# Approve, Block
# Move, Copy
# Trash Basket
# Parameters
o Creating a New Article
+ Parameters
o Images

* Article Trash
* Section Manager
o Editing Sections

* Category Manager
* Front Page Manager
o Editing Content from the Front End

* Summary



* Chapter 9: Components Menu
o Banner
+ Banners
+ Clients
+ Manage Banners
+ Graphic Banners
+ Text Links
o Contacts
+ Contact Manager
# Details
# Information
# Parameters
o Creation of a Menu Link for the Website
+ Categories
o News Feeds
+ Feeds
+ Categories
o Polls
+ Search Statistics
o Web Links
+ Links
+ Categories
o Summary



* Chapter 10: Extensions Menu
o Install/Uninstall
+ Install, Components, Modules, Plug-ins, Languages, and Templates
o Module Manager
+ Site Module
# Breadcrumbs
# Footer
# Banner
# Main Menus
# Statistics
# Login Form
# Archive
# Sections
# Related Items
# Wrapper
# Feed Display
# Who's Online
# Polls
# Advertisement
# Random Image
# Syndication
# Newsflash
# Latest News
# Popular
# Search
+ Administrator Module
# Logged in Users
# Popular
# Recent added Articles
# Menu Stats
# Footer
# Unread Messages
# Online Users
# Quick Icons
# Login
# Admin Menu
# User Status
# Admin Submenu
# Title
# Toolbar
# CSS Admin Menu
o Plugins Manager
+ Authentication Plug-ins
# Joomla!
# LDAP
# OpenID
# Gmail
+ Content Plug-ins
# Image
# Page Navigation
# SEF
# Rating
# Email Cloaking
# GeSHi
# Load Module
# Pagebreak
+ Editors Plug-ins
# No Editor
# TinyMCE 2.0
+ Editors-xtd Plug-ins
+ Search Plug-ins
+ System Plug-ins
# Log
# Debug
# Legacy
# Cache
# Remember Me
# Backlink
+ User Plug-ins
# Joomla!
+ XML-RPC Plug-ins
# XML-RPC-Joomla
# XML-RPC blogger API
o Template Manager
+ Site
# Editing a Template
# Preview Icon
# Edit HTML Icon
# Edit CSS Icon
+ Administrator
o Language Manager
o Summary



* Chapter 11: Tools
o Private Messaging System
o Mass Mail
o Global Check-In
o Summary



* Chapter 12: More on Extensions
o Fireboard (Forum)
+ Installation
+ Configuration
+ Setting Up a Forum
+ Integration into the Website
o DOCman (Download section, Document Management)
+ Installation
+ Configuration
+ Language
+ Integration into the Website
+ Preparing Content
+ Search Plug-in
+ Supplementary Module
o Exposé Flash Gallery
+ Installation
+ Integration into the Website
+ Album Manager in the Administration Section
+ Uninstallation
+ Album Manager as a Stand-Alone Program
o Integration into the Joomla! Framework
o Problems with Third-Party Components
+ Updates
+ Security
+ What should you Do?
o Summary



* Chapter 13: Writing Your Own Joomla! Templates
o Corporate Identity
o HTML/XHTML, CSS, and XML
+ HTML/XHTML
+ CSS
+ XML
o Creating Your Own Templates
+ Concept
+ HTML Conversion
+ Directory Structures of the Template
+ First Trial Run
+ Integration of the Joomla! Module
+ Creating a Template Package
+ Installation with the Joomla! Template Installer
+ What Source Code Comes from Joomla?
o Summary



* Chapter 14: Barrier Freedom and Joomla!
o Barrier Freedom—What is it Anyway?
+ The Legal Backround

* Criteria for Accessible Sites at a Glance
o Separation of Content and Layout
o Demands on Design and Content
o Visual and Content-Wise Arrangement of Content
o Color Selection
o Contrasts
o Variable Font Sizes
o Scalable Layouts
o Graphics
o Sufficiently Large Navigation Elements
o Forms

* Barrier Freedom in Joomla! 1.5—Possible with Beez
* HTML
* Jump Marks
o index.php
o Skip Links in Forms

* Beez and Modules
* com_content
* Forms
* Data Tables
* Design and CSS
o Beez Internal CSS Files
o Positioning
o The Layout
o Miscellaneous

* Joomla! Internal Accessibility Features
* Additional Information about This Topic
o Assistive Technologies
o CheckerTools
o Book Tip
o Summary



* Chapter 15: Your Own Components, Modules, and Plug-ins
o Model—View—Controller
+ What is the Advantage with MVC?
o The helloworld Sample Component
+ A Home for helloworld
o An Example Component
+ The MySQL Table
+ The Front End
+ The com_auto Administration
+ Test
+ Creating an Installation Package
o Modules
+ Source Code
+ Installation
+ View on the Website
o Plug-ins
o Summary



* Chapter 16: A Website with Joomla!
o Idea
o Preparations
+ Logo and Appearance
# Photographs
# Texts
+ Technical Conversion
# Local Installation
# The First Few Articles
# Masthead
+ Menu Structure
# Structure of the Main Menu
# Structure of the Top Menu
# Structure of the User Menu
+ Setting up the Texts and the Menu Links in the Main Menu
# Contact Link
# Top Menu
# Shop
# The Impressions
+ The User Section
# The User Menu
# The Download Section
+ User Details
+ First Results
+ M Bertrand Learns CSS
# Formatting Step by Step
o Changes for Joomla! Version 1.5
o Installation on the Webserver
+ How to Do the Installation
# FTP
# MySQL
+ Installation of Joomla! at the Provider
+ Importing the Data
+ File and Directory Rights
o Search Engines
+ Search Engine Friendly URLs
+ Metatags
o Design
+ Installation of the Template
+ The Template
o Happy End
+ How Does It Work in Reality?
o Summary



* Chapter 17: Bonus Templates
o NGO
+ Tom Bohacek
+ The World Knowledge Template
+ Creative Approach
+ Structural Approach
o Business Establishment
+ Andy Miller
o Summary



* Appendix A: Online Resources



* Appendix B: Template Modules



* Appendix C: How Do I switch an Image (Logo) in the Template?



* Appendix D: Joomla! API



* Appendix E: Forgot the Admin Password



* Appendix F: Migration from Joomla! 1.0.x to Joomla! 1.5
o Backing Up Your Data
+ Backing Up the Files
+ The Migration Script
+ New Installation of Joomla! 1.5.0
+ Manual Method
# Modifying the Joomla! 1.5 Database Scheme
# Importing the Tables



* Appendix G: Security Without Global Variables



* Index

Approach

This book takes the reader through the tasks essential to create a Joomla! website as rapidly as possible. The necessary tasks are explained with clear step-by-step instructions. The author’s chatty and engaging style makes this book very readable.

Who this book is written for

This book is suitable for web developers, designers, webmasters, content editors, and marketing professionals who want to develop a website in a simple and straightforward process. It does not require any detailed knowledge of programming or web development, and any IT-confident individual will be able to use the book to produce an impressive website.

English
Paperback 362 pages
Release date March 2008
ISBN 184719530X
ISBN 13 978-1-847195-30-2
Download Link

http://rapidshare.com/files/115244616/Building_Websites.pdf

Thursday, September 4, 2008

Teach Yourself in 24 Hours eBooks Series All-In-One


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Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs 2nd


Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs Second

Authors: Abelson, Harold Sussman, Gerald Jay Sussman, Julie

Pages: 657

Publisher: MIT

ISBN13: 9780070004849

Educators, generals, dieticians, psychologists, and parents program. Armies, students, and some societies are programmed. An assault on large problems employs a succession of programs, most of which spring into existence en route. These programs are rife with issues that appear to be particular to the problem at hand. To appreciate programming as an intellectual activity in its own right you must turn to computer programming; you must read and write computer programs -- many of them. It doesn't matter much what the programs are about or what applications they serve. What does matter is how well they perform and how smoothly they fit
with other programs in the creation of still greater programs. The programmer must seek both perfection of part and adequacy of collection. In this book the use of ``program'' is focused on the creation, execution, and study of programs written in a dialect of Lisp for execution on a digital computer. Using Lisp we restrict or limit not what we may program, but only the notation for our program descriptions.

Our traffic with the subject matter of this book involves us with three foci of phenomena: the human mind, collections of computer programs, and the computer. Every computer program is a model, hatched in the mind, of a real or mental process. These processes, arising from human experience and thought, are huge in number, intricate in detail, and at any time only partially
understood. They are modeled to our permanent satisfaction rarely by our computer programs. Thus even though our programs are carefully handcrafted discrete collections of symbols, mosaics of interlocking functions, they continually evolve: we change them as our perception of the model deepens, enlarges, generalizes until the model ultimately attains a metastable place within still another model with which we struggle. The source of the exhilaration associated with computer programming is the continual unfolding within the mind and on the computer of mechanisms expressed as programs and the explosion of perception they generate. If art interprets our dreams, the computer executes them in the guise of programs!

For all its power, the computer is a harsh taskmaster. Its programs must be correct, and what we wish to say must be said accurately in every detail. As in every other symbolic activity, we become convinced of program truth through argument. Lisp itself can be assigned a semantics (another model, by the way), and if a program's function can be specified, say, in the predicate
calculus, the proof methods of logic can be used to make an acceptable correctness argument. Unfortunately, as programs get large and complicated, as they almost always do, the adequacy, consistency, and correctness of the specifications themselves become open to doubt, so that complete formal arguments of correctness seldom accompany large programs. Since large
programs grow from small ones, it is crucial that we develop an arsenal of standard program structures of whose correctness we have become sure -- we call them idioms -- and learn to combine them into larger structures using organizational techniques of proven value. These techniques are treated at length in this book, and understanding them is essential to
participation in the Promethean enterprise called programming. More than anything else, the uncovering and mastery of powerful organizational techniques accelerates our ability to create large, significant programs. Conversely, since writing large programs is very taxing, we are stimulated to invent new methods of reducing the mass of function and detail to be fitted into large programs.

Unlike programs, computers must obey the laws of physics. If they wish to perform rapidly -- a few nanoseconds per state change -- they must transmit electrons only small distances (at most 1/2 feet). The heat generated by the huge number of devices so concentrated in space has to be removed. An exquisite engineering art has been developed balancing between multiplicity of
function and density of devices. In any event, hardware always operates at a level more primitive than that at which we care to program. The processes that transform our Lisp programs to ``machine'' programs are themselves abstract models which we program. Their study and creation give a great deal of insight into the organizational programs associated with programming arbitrary models. Of course the computer itself can be so modeled. Think of it: the behavior of the smallest physical switching element is modeled by quantum mechanics
described by differential equations whose detailed behavior is captured by numerical approximations represented in computer programs executing on computers composed of ...!

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Software Engineering EBOOKS Collection (DIRECT DOwnload)

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