Visual Basic 2012 programmer's reference

Bibliographic Information

Visual Basic 2012 programmer's reference

Rod Stephens

(Programmer to programmer)

Wiley, c2012

  • : pbk

Available at  / 2 libraries

Search this Book/Journal

Note

Includes index

"Updated for Visual Basic 2012"--Cover

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The comprehensive guide to Visual Basic 2012 Microsoft Visual Basic (VB) is the most popular programming language in the world, with millions of lines of code used in businesses and applications of all types and sizes. In this edition of the bestselling Wrox guide, Visual Basic expert Rod Stephens offers novice and experienced developers a comprehensive tutorial and reference to Visual Basic 2012. This latest edition introduces major changes to the Visual Studio development platform, including support for developing mobile applications that can take advantage of the Windows 8 operating system. * This new edition includes information on developing Win8-compatible Metro applications using pre-loaded templates * Explores the new design features and support for WPF designers * Explains how to develop Windows smartphone apps * Covers new VB language features such as Asynch and Await Visual Basic 2012 Programmer's Reference is the programmer's go-to reference for the 2012 edition of Visual Basic.

Table of Contents

INTRODUCTION xxvii PART I: IDE CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION TO THE IDE 3 Introducing the IDE 3 Different IDE Appearances 4 IDE Configurations 5 Projects and Solutions 6 Starting the IDE 6 Creating a Project 8 Saving a Project 11 Summary 13 CHAPTER 2: MENUS, TOOLBARS, AND WINDOWS 15 IDE Tools 15 Menus 16 File 16 Edit 18 View 19 Project 20 Build 24 Debug 24 Data 24 Format 25 Tools 25 Test 28 Window 28 Help 29 Toolbars 30 Secondary Windows 30 Toolbox 32 Properties Window 33 Summary 33 CHAPTER 3: WINDOWS FORMS DESIGNER 35 Introducing Windows Forms Designer 35 Setting Designer Options 35 Adding Controls 37 Selecting Controls 38 Copying Controls 39 Moving and Sizing Controls 40 Arranging Controls 40 Setting Properties 40 Setting Group Properties 41 Using Smart Tags 41 Adding Code to Controls 42 Summary 43 CHAPTER 4: WPF DESIGNER 45 Introducing WPF Designer 45 Editor Weaknesses 46 Recognizing Designer Windows 47 Adding Controls 48 Selecting Controls 49 Moving and Sizing Controls 50 Setting Properties 51 Setting Group Properties 51 Adding Code to Controls 52 Summary 53 CHAPTER 5: VISUAL BASIC CODE EDITOR 55 Editing Code 55 Margin Icons 56 Outlining 58 Tooltips 59 IntelliSense 60 Code Coloring and Highlighting 61 Code Snippets 63 Architectural Tools 64 Rename 64 Go To Definition 64 Go To Type Definition 64 Highlight References 65 Find All References 65 Generate From Usage 65 The Code Editor at Run Time 66 Summary 68 CHAPTER 6: DEBUGGING 69 Debugging and Testing 69 The Debug Menu 70 The Debug Windows Submenu 72 The Breakpoints Window 74 The Command and Immediate Windows 75 Summary 77 PART II: GETTING STARTED CHAPTER 7: SELECTING WINDOWS FORMS CONTROLS 81 Controls 81 Controls Overview 82 Choosing Controls 86 Containing and Arranging Controls 87 Making Selections 89 Entering Data 90 Displaying Data 90 Providing Feedback 91 Initiating Action 92 Displaying Graphics 94 Displaying Dialog Boxes 94 Third-Party Controls 95 Summary 96 CHAPTER 8: USING WINDOWS FORMS CONTROLS 97 Using Controls and Components 97 Controls and Components 98 Creating Controls 99 Properties 101 Properties at Design Time 101 Properties at Run Time 104 Useful Control Properties 106 Position and Size Properties 109 Methods 110 Events 110 Creating Event Handlers at Design Time 111 Validation Events 112 Summary 114 CHAPTER 9: WINDOWS FORMS 115 Using Forms 115 Transparency 116 About, Splash, and Login Forms 117 Mouse Cursors 118 Icons 120 Application Icons 121 Notification Icons 121 Properties Adopted by Child Controls 122 Property Reset Methods 123 Overriding WndProc 123 MRU Lists 125 Dialog Boxes 126 Wizards 128 Summary 129 CHAPTER 10: SELECTING WPF CONTROLS 131 WPF Controls and Code 131 Controls Overview 132 Containing and Arranging Controls 133 Making Selections 136 Entering Data 137 Displaying Data 137 Providing Feedback 138 Initiating Action 138 Presenting Graphics and Media 139 Providing Navigation 140 Managing Documents 140 Digital Ink 141 Summary 142 CHAPTER 11: USING WPF CONTROLS 143 WPF Controls 143 WPF Concepts 144 Separation of User Interface and Code 144 WPF Control Hierarchies 145 WPF in the IDE 145 Editing XAML 146 Editing Visual Basic Code 147 XAML Features 148 Objects 148 Resources 151 Styles 152 Templates 153 Transformations 156 Animations 156 Drawing Objects 159 Procedural WPF 162 Documents 166 Flow Documents 166 Fixed Documents 168 XPS Documents 169 Summary 169 CHAPTER 12: WPF WINDOWS 171 Using WPF Windows 171 Window Applications 172 Page Applications 174 Browser Applications 174 Frame Applications 176 Summary 177 CHAPTER 13: PROGRAM AND MODULE STRUCTURE 179 Solutions and Projects 179 Hidden Files 180 Code File Structure 184 Code Regions 185 Conditional Compilation 186 Namespaces 193 Typographic Code Elements 195 Comments 195 XML Comments 195 Line Continuation 198 Implicit Line Continuation 199 Line Joining 200 Summary 200 CHAPTER 14: DATA TYPES, VARIABLES, AND CONSTANTS 203 Variables 203 Data Types 204 Type Characters 207 Data Type Conversion 210 Narrowing Conversions 210 Data Type Parsing Methods 212 Widening Conversions 213 The Convert Class 213 ToString 213 Variable Declarations 214 Attribute-List 214 Accessibility 215 Shared 216 Shadows 216 ReadOnly 219 Dim 219 WithEvents 220 Name 221 Bounds-List 222 New 223 As Type and Inferred Types 224 Initialization-Expression 225 Initializing Collections 228 Multiple Variable Declarations 229 Option Explicit and Option Strict 230 Scope 233 Block Scope 233 Procedure Scope 234 Module Scope 234 Namespace Scope 235 Restricting Scope 235 Parameter Declarations 236 Property Procedures 238 Enumerated Data Types 240 Anonymous Types 243 Nullable Types 244 Constants 244 Accessibility 245 As Type 245 Initialization-Expression 246 Delegates 246 Naming Conventions 248 Summary 249 CHAPTER 15: OPERATORS 251 Understanding Operators 251 Arithmetic Operators 252 Concatenation Operators 253 Comparison Operators 253 Logical Operators 255 Bitwise Operators 257 Operator Precedence 257 Assignment Operators 259 The StringBuilder Class 260 Date and TimeSpan Operations 261 Operator Overloading 262 Summary 266 CHAPTER 16: SUBROUTINES AND FUNCTIONS 267 Managing Code 267 Subroutines 268 Attribute-List 268 Inheritance-Mode 272 Accessibility 273 Subroutine-Name 274 Parameters 274 Implements interface.subroutine 279 Statements 281 Functions 281 Property Procedures 283 Extension Methods 284 Lambda Functions 285 Relaxed Delegates 287 Asynchronous Methods 290 Calling EndInvoke Directly 291 Handling a Callback 293 Using Async and Await 295 Summary 297 CHAPTER 17: PROGRAM CONTROL STATEMENTS 299 Controlling Programs 299 Decision Statements 299 Single-Line If Then 300 Multiline If Then 300 Select Case 301 Enumerated Values 304 IIf 304 If 306 Choose 306 Looping Statements 308 For Next 308 Non-Integer For Next Loops 311 For Each 311 Enumerators 314 Iterators 316 Do Loop Statements 316 While End 318 Summary 318 CHAPTER 18: ERROR HANDLING 321 The Struggle for Perfection 321 Bugs versus Unplanned Conditions 322 Catching Bugs 323 Catching Unplanned Conditions 324 Global Exception Handling 326 Structured Error Handling 328 Exception Objects 330 Throwing Exceptions 331 Re-throwing Exceptions 333 Custom Exceptions 334 Debugging 335 Summary 336 CHAPTER 19: DATABASE CONTROLS AND OBJECTS 337 Data Sources 337 Automatically Connecting to Data 338 Connecting to the Data Source 338 Adding Data Controls to the Form 341 Automatically Created Objects 344 Other Data Objects 345 Data Overview 346 Connection Objects 347 Transaction Objects 350 Data Adapters 352 Command Objects 356 DataSet 358 DataTable 360 DataRow 363 DataColumn 365 DataRelation 366 Constraints 368 DataView 370 DataRowView 373 Simple Data Binding 373 CurrencyManager 374 Complex Data Binding 377 Summary 379 CHAPTER 20: LINQ 381 The Many Faces of LINQ 381 Introduction to LINQ 383 Basic LINQ Query Syntax 384 From 385 Where 386 Order By 386 Select 387 Using LINQ Results 389 Advanced LINQ Query Syntax 390 Join 390 Group By 391 Aggregate Functions 393 Set Operations 394 Limiting Results 394 LINQ Functions 395 LINQ Extension Methods 397 Method-Based Queries 397 Method-Based Queries with Lambda Functions 399 Extending LINQ 401 LINQ to Objects 403 LINQ to XML 404 XML Literals 404 LINQ into XML 405 LINQ out of XML 406 LINQ to ADO.NET 409 LINQ to SQL and LINQ to Entities 409 LINQ to DataSet 410 PLINQ 413 Summary 414 CHAPTER 21: METRO-STYLE APPLICATIONS 417 Building Metro-Style Applications 417 Starting a New Project 418 Special Image Files 419 Building MetroBones 420 Control Layout 421 XAML Code 421 Zooming in on the Controls 424 Visual Basic Code 424 Testing 428 Summary 429 PART III: OBJECT-ORIENTED PROGRAMMING CHAPTER 22: OOP CONCEPTS 433 Introducing OOP 433 Classes 434 Encapsulation 436 Inheritance 437 Inheritance Hierarchies 438 Refi nement and Abstraction 438 Has-a and Is-a Relationships 441 Adding and Modifying Class Features 441 Interface Inheritance 443 Polymorphism 444 Method Overloading 445 Extension Methods 446 Summary 447 CHAPTER 23: CLASSES AND STRUCTURES 449 Packaging Data 449 Classes 450 Attribute-list 450 Partial 451 Accessibility 452 Shadows 453 Inheritance 454 Implements interface 456 Structures 456 Structures Cannot Inherit 457 Structures Are Value Types 457 Memory Required 457 Heap and Stack Performance 459 Object Assignment 459 Parameter Passing 460 Boxing and Unboxing 461 Class Instantiation Details 461 Structure Instantiation Details 464 Garbage Collection 466 Finalize 467 Dispose 469 Constants, Properties, and Methods 471 Events 473 Declaring Events 473 Raising Events 474 Catching Events 475 Shared Variables 477 Shared Methods 477 Summary 479 CHAPTER 24: NAMESPACES 481 Handling Name Confl icts 481 The Imports Statement 482 Automatic Imports 484 Namespace Aliases 486 Namespace Elements 486 The Root Namespace 487 Making Namespaces 487 Classes, Structures, and Modules 488 Resolving Namespaces 489 Summary 492 CHAPTER 25: COLLECTION CLASSES 493 Grouping Data 493 What Is a Collection? 494 Arrays 494 Array Dimensions 496 Lower Bounds 497 Resizing 497 Speed 498 Other Array Class Features 498 Collections 499 ArrayList 499 StringCollection 501 NameValueCollection 501 Dictionaries 503 ListDictionary 503 Hashtable 504 HybridDictionary 505 StringDictionary 505 SortedList 505 CollectionsUtil 505 Stacks and Queues 506 Stack 506 Queue 508 Generics 509 Collection Initializers 511 Iterators 512 Summary 513 CHAPTER 26: GENERICS 515 Class Creators 515 Advantages of Generics 516 Defining Generics 516 Generic Constructors 517 Multiple Types 518 Constrained Types 520 Instantiating Generic Classes 521 Imports Aliases 522 Derived Classes 523 Generic Collection Classes 523 Generic Methods 524 Generics and Extension Methods 524 Summary 526 PART IV: INTERACTING WITH THE ENVIRONMENT CHAPTER 27: PRINTING 529 Printing Concepts 529 Basic Printing 530 Drawing Basics 534 Graphics Objects 534 Pens 536 Brushes 538 A Booklet Example 540 Summary 545 CHAPTER 28: CONFIGURATION AND RESOURCES 547 The Need for Configuration 547 My 548 Me and My 549 My Sections 549 Environment 550 Setting Environment Variables 550 Using Environ 551 Using System.Environment 551 Registry 553 Native Visual Basic Registry Methods 554 My.Computer.Registry 556 Configuration Files 559 Resource Files 562 Application Resources 562 Using Application Resources 563 Embedded Resources 564 Localization Resources 564 Application 566 Application Properties 566 Application Methods 567 Application Events 568 Summary 569 CHAPTER 29: STREAMS 571 Stream Concepts 571 Stream 572 FileStream 574 MemoryStream 575 BinaryReader and BinaryWriter 576 TextReader and TextWriter 578 StringReader and StringWriter 579 StreamReader and StreamWriter 580 OpenText, CreateText, and AppendText 581 Custom Stream Classes 582 Summary 583 CHAPTER 30: FILESYSTEM OBJECTS 585 Programming Approaches 585 Permissions 586 Visual Basic Methods 586 File Methods 586 File System Methods 588 Sequential-File Access 589 Random-File Access 589 Binary-File Access 592 .NET Framework Classes 592 Directory 592 File 594 DriveInfo 595 DirectoryInfo 596 FileInfo 598 FileSystemWatcher 600 Path 602 My.Computer.FileSystem 604 My.Computer.FileSystem.SpecialDirectories 606 Summary 606 PART V: APPENDICES APPENDIX A: USEFUL CONTROL PROPERTIES, METHODS, AND EVENTS 611 APPENDIX B: VARIABLE DECLARATIONS AND DATA TYPES 619 APPENDIX C: OPERATORS 629 APPENDIX D: SUBROUTINE AND FUNCTION DECLARATIONS 637 APPENDIX E: CONTROL STATEMENTS 641 APPENDIX F: ERROR HANDLING 647 APPENDIX G: WINDOWS FORMS CONTROLS AND COMPONENTS 649 APPENDIX H: WPF CONTROLS 657 APPENDIX I: VISUAL BASIC POWER PACKS 665 APPENDIX J: FORM OBJECTS 669 APPENDIX K: CLASSES AND STRUCTURES 681 APPENDIX L: LINQ 685 APPENDIX M: GENERICS 695 APPENDIX N: GRAPHICS 699 APPENDIX O: USEFUL EXCEPTION CLASSES 711 APPENDIX P: DATE AND TIME FORMAT SPECIFIERS 715 APPENDIX Q: OTHER FORMAT SPECIFIERS 719 APPENDIX R: THE APPLICATION CLASS 725 APPENDIX S: THE MY NAMESPACE 729 APPENDIX T: STREAMS 747 APPENDIX U: FILESYSTEM CLASSES 755 APPENDIX V: VISUAL STUDIO VERSIONS 771 INDEX 773

by "Nielsen BookData"

Related Books: 1-1 of 1

Details

Page Top