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I need 2-3 books on VB.NET, Office automation. Any suggestions?

Hi,

I have worked with VB.NET for half a year (semi-newbie). Currently I am
looking around for some books for those that crossed the starting
hurdle. There are too many books out there-make choosing, a bit of a
gamble.

If you have experience of good VB.NET books on general and office
automattion, you could recommend, it would be greatly appreciated.

Thanks in advance,

Tomas Nordlander

Nov 20 '06 #1
12 1644
I don't know what version of VB.Net you're using. I really
like Francesco Balena's book on VB:The Language. It only
covers the language, not the forms or data. I have the 2005
version, but he has earlier versions as well. This isn't
really a book for someone who's never done .Net; in each
section, he goes from simple examples to complex info
pretty quickly. I learned a lot from reading this book.

He also has a Standard Practices book that I found a lot
of neat information in.

For data binding, check out Brian Noyes's book.

If you want to know how to write a whole app, check out
Tim Patrick's new book, Start-to-Finish Visual Basic 2005.
I have it on order, so I can't vouch for it personally,
but there is a good review on amazon, and chapter 1 was
pretty interesting.

Hope that helps.
Robin S.
----------------------------
"Tomas" <to************ **@yahoo.comwro te in message
news:11******** **************@ f16g2000cwb.goo glegroups.com.. .
Hi,

I have worked with VB.NET for half a year (semi-newbie). Currently I am
looking around for some books for those that crossed the starting
hurdle. There are too many books out there-make choosing, a bit of a
gamble.

If you have experience of good VB.NET books on general and office
automattion, you could recommend, it would be greatly appreciated.

Thanks in advance,

Tomas Nordlander

Nov 20 '06 #2
Thanks Robin (I use 2005 VB.NET), I appriciate the recomendations, and
will get them ordered.

Tomas :)
RobinS wrote:
I don't know what version of VB.Net you're using. I really
like Francesco Balena's book on VB:The Language. It only
covers the language, not the forms or data. I have the 2005
version, but he has earlier versions as well. This isn't
really a book for someone who's never done .Net; in each
section, he goes from simple examples to complex info
pretty quickly. I learned a lot from reading this book.

He also has a Standard Practices book that I found a lot
of neat information in.

For data binding, check out Brian Noyes's book.

If you want to know how to write a whole app, check out
Tim Patrick's new book, Start-to-Finish Visual Basic 2005.
I have it on order, so I can't vouch for it personally,
but there is a good review on amazon, and chapter 1 was
pretty interesting.

Hope that helps.
Robin S.
----------------------------
"Tomas" <to************ **@yahoo.comwro te in message
news:11******** **************@ f16g2000cwb.goo glegroups.com.. .
Hi,

I have worked with VB.NET for half a year (semi-newbie). Currently I am
looking around for some books for those that crossed the starting
hurdle. There are too many books out there-make choosing, a bit of a
gamble.

If you have experience of good VB.NET books on general and office
automattion, you could recommend, it would be greatly appreciated.

Thanks in advance,

Tomas Nordlander
Nov 22 '06 #3
You're welcome. My copy of Tim Patrick's book came in
the mail yesterday; it looks really good. I'm looking
forward to reading it.

BTW, I don't know of any Office automation books; if
you find one, please let us know. I usually do it by
trial & error. Most of my stuff is Excel, although I've
mucked a little with Outlook and Word.

Robin S.
------------------------------
"Tomas" <to************ **@yahoo.comwro te in message
news:11******** **************@ h48g2000cwc.goo glegroups.com.. .
Thanks Robin (I use 2005 VB.NET), I appriciate the recomendations, and
will get them ordered.

Tomas :)
RobinS wrote:
>I don't know what version of VB.Net you're using. I really
like Francesco Balena's book on VB:The Language. It only
covers the language, not the forms or data. I have the 2005
version, but he has earlier versions as well. This isn't
really a book for someone who's never done .Net; in each
section, he goes from simple examples to complex info
pretty quickly. I learned a lot from reading this book.

He also has a Standard Practices book that I found a lot
of neat information in.

For data binding, check out Brian Noyes's book.

If you want to know how to write a whole app, check out
Tim Patrick's new book, Start-to-Finish Visual Basic 2005.
I have it on order, so I can't vouch for it personally,
but there is a good review on amazon, and chapter 1 was
pretty interesting.

Hope that helps.
Robin S.
----------------------------
"Tomas" <to************ **@yahoo.comwro te in message
news:11******* *************** @f16g2000cwb.go oglegroups.com. ..
Hi,

I have worked with VB.NET for half a year (semi-newbie). Currently I am
looking around for some books for those that crossed the starting
hurdle. There are too many books out there-make choosing, a bit of a
gamble.

If you have experience of good VB.NET books on general and office
automattion, you could recommend, it would be greatly appreciated.

Thanks in advance,

Tomas Nordlander

Nov 22 '06 #4
I'd look for VSTO books.. or are you talking about VBA?

-Aaron

RobinS wrote:
You're welcome. My copy of Tim Patrick's book came in
the mail yesterday; it looks really good. I'm looking
forward to reading it.

BTW, I don't know of any Office automation books; if
you find one, please let us know. I usually do it by
trial & error. Most of my stuff is Excel, although I've
mucked a little with Outlook and Word.

Robin S.
------------------------------
"Tomas" <to************ **@yahoo.comwro te in message
news:11******** **************@ h48g2000cwc.goo glegroups.com.. .
Thanks Robin (I use 2005 VB.NET), I appriciate the recomendations, and
will get them ordered.

Tomas :)
RobinS wrote:
I don't know what version of VB.Net you're using. I really
like Francesco Balena's book on VB:The Language. It only
covers the language, not the forms or data. I have the 2005
version, but he has earlier versions as well. This isn't
really a book for someone who's never done .Net; in each
section, he goes from simple examples to complex info
pretty quickly. I learned a lot from reading this book.

He also has a Standard Practices book that I found a lot
of neat information in.

For data binding, check out Brian Noyes's book.

If you want to know how to write a whole app, check out
Tim Patrick's new book, Start-to-Finish Visual Basic 2005.
I have it on order, so I can't vouch for it personally,
but there is a good review on amazon, and chapter 1 was
pretty interesting.

Hope that helps.
Robin S.
----------------------------
"Tomas" <to************ **@yahoo.comwro te in message
news:11******** **************@ f16g2000cwb.goo glegroups.com.. .
Hi,

I have worked with VB.NET for half a year (semi-newbie). Currently I am
looking around for some books for those that crossed the starting
hurdle. There are too many books out there-make choosing, a bit of a
gamble.

If you have experience of good VB.NET books on general and office
automattion, you could recommend, it would be greatly appreciated.

Thanks in advance,

Tomas Nordlander
Nov 22 '06 #5
My guess is that he was talking about doing OLE Automation
from VB. I looked for books on that back when I was doing
VB6, but couldn't really find anything, so I figured it out
via trial&error, and macro-record-then-fix-the-code.

My problem with VSTO is that it's a separate product from
Visual Studio, and I'm not into paying that much money for
two of them, when I can generally come up with the same
result using OLE Automation.

Robin S.
-------------------------------
<aa*********@gm ail.comwrote in message
news:11******** **************@ b28g2000cwb.goo glegroups.com.. .
I'd look for VSTO books.. or are you talking about VBA?

-Aaron

RobinS wrote:
>You're welcome. My copy of Tim Patrick's book came in
the mail yesterday; it looks really good. I'm looking
forward to reading it.

BTW, I don't know of any Office automation books; if
you find one, please let us know. I usually do it by
trial & error. Most of my stuff is Excel, although I've
mucked a little with Outlook and Word.

Robin S.
------------------------------
"Tomas" <to************ **@yahoo.comwro te in message
news:11******* *************** @h48g2000cwc.go oglegroups.com. ..
Thanks Robin (I use 2005 VB.NET), I appriciate the recomendations, and
will get them ordered.

Tomas :)
RobinS wrote:

I don't know what version of VB.Net you're using. I really
like Francesco Balena's book on VB:The Language. It only
covers the language, not the forms or data. I have the 2005
version, but he has earlier versions as well. This isn't
really a book for someone who's never done .Net; in each
section, he goes from simple examples to complex info
pretty quickly. I learned a lot from reading this book.

He also has a Standard Practices book that I found a lot
of neat information in.

For data binding, check out Brian Noyes's book.

If you want to know how to write a whole app, check out
Tim Patrick's new book, Start-to-Finish Visual Basic 2005.
I have it on order, so I can't vouch for it personally,
but there is a good review on amazon, and chapter 1 was
pretty interesting.

Hope that helps.
Robin S.
----------------------------
"Tomas" <to************ **@yahoo.comwro te in message
news:11******* *************** @f16g2000cwb.go oglegroups.com. ..
Hi,

I have worked with VB.NET for half a year (semi-newbie). Currently I
am
looking around for some books for those that crossed the starting
hurdle. There are too many books out there-make choosing, a bit of a
gamble.

If you have experience of good VB.NET books on general and office
automattion, you could recommend, it would be greatly appreciated.

Thanks in advance,

Tomas Nordlander


Nov 22 '06 #6
Robin

Microsoft doesn't support using COM objects anymore; you should lose
the training wheels and start using VSTO

everybody is doing it :)

-Susie
RobinS wrote:
My guess is that he was talking about doing OLE Automation
from VB. I looked for books on that back when I was doing
VB6, but couldn't really find anything, so I figured it out
via trial&error, and macro-record-then-fix-the-code.

My problem with VSTO is that it's a separate product from
Visual Studio, and I'm not into paying that much money for
two of them, when I can generally come up with the same
result using OLE Automation.

Robin S.
-------------------------------
<aa*********@gm ail.comwrote in message
news:11******** **************@ b28g2000cwb.goo glegroups.com.. .
I'd look for VSTO books.. or are you talking about VBA?

-Aaron

RobinS wrote:
You're welcome. My copy of Tim Patrick's book came in
the mail yesterday; it looks really good. I'm looking
forward to reading it.

BTW, I don't know of any Office automation books; if
you find one, please let us know. I usually do it by
trial & error. Most of my stuff is Excel, although I've
mucked a little with Outlook and Word.

Robin S.
------------------------------
"Tomas" <to************ **@yahoo.comwro te in message
news:11******** **************@ h48g2000cwc.goo glegroups.com.. .
Thanks Robin (I use 2005 VB.NET), I appriciate the recomendations, and
will get them ordered.

Tomas :)
RobinS wrote:

I don't know what version of VB.Net you're using. I really
like Francesco Balena's book on VB:The Language. It only
covers the language, not the forms or data. I have the 2005
version, but he has earlier versions as well. This isn't
really a book for someone who's never done .Net; in each
section, he goes from simple examples to complex info
pretty quickly. I learned a lot from reading this book.

He also has a Standard Practices book that I found a lot
of neat information in.

For data binding, check out Brian Noyes's book.

If you want to know how to write a whole app, check out
Tim Patrick's new book, Start-to-Finish Visual Basic 2005.
I have it on order, so I can't vouch for it personally,
but there is a good review on amazon, and chapter 1 was
pretty interesting.

Hope that helps.
Robin S.
----------------------------
"Tomas" <to************ **@yahoo.comwro te in message
news:11******** **************@ f16g2000cwb.goo glegroups.com.. .
Hi,

I have worked with VB.NET for half a year (semi-newbie). Currently I
am
looking around for some books for those that crossed the starting
hurdle. There are too many books out there-make choosing, a bit of a
gamble.

If you have experience of good VB.NET books on general and office
automattion, you could recommend, it would be greatly appreciated.

Thanks in advance,

Tomas Nordlander
Nov 22 '06 #7
no wonder you're such a crappy ass coder and you're stuck in VB

I've got 2 book shelves of Office Automation books.. typically books
about Excel 97 or Access 97 for example-- are the best resources--
because back in the 'good old days' microsoft didn't have a screwed up
marketing message..

-Larry Linson Jr

RobinS wrote:
My guess is that he was talking about doing OLE Automation
from VB. I looked for books on that back when I was doing
VB6, but couldn't really find anything, so I figured it out
via trial&error, and macro-record-then-fix-the-code.

My problem with VSTO is that it's a separate product from
Visual Studio, and I'm not into paying that much money for
two of them, when I can generally come up with the same
result using OLE Automation.

Robin S.
-------------------------------
<aa*********@gm ail.comwrote in message
news:11******** **************@ b28g2000cwb.goo glegroups.com.. .
I'd look for VSTO books.. or are you talking about VBA?

-Aaron

RobinS wrote:
You're welcome. My copy of Tim Patrick's book came in
the mail yesterday; it looks really good. I'm looking
forward to reading it.

BTW, I don't know of any Office automation books; if
you find one, please let us know. I usually do it by
trial & error. Most of my stuff is Excel, although I've
mucked a little with Outlook and Word.

Robin S.
------------------------------
"Tomas" <to************ **@yahoo.comwro te in message
news:11******** **************@ h48g2000cwc.goo glegroups.com.. .
Thanks Robin (I use 2005 VB.NET), I appriciate the recomendations, and
will get them ordered.

Tomas :)
RobinS wrote:

I don't know what version of VB.Net you're using. I really
like Francesco Balena's book on VB:The Language. It only
covers the language, not the forms or data. I have the 2005
version, but he has earlier versions as well. This isn't
really a book for someone who's never done .Net; in each
section, he goes from simple examples to complex info
pretty quickly. I learned a lot from reading this book.

He also has a Standard Practices book that I found a lot
of neat information in.

For data binding, check out Brian Noyes's book.

If you want to know how to write a whole app, check out
Tim Patrick's new book, Start-to-Finish Visual Basic 2005.
I have it on order, so I can't vouch for it personally,
but there is a good review on amazon, and chapter 1 was
pretty interesting.

Hope that helps.
Robin S.
----------------------------
"Tomas" <to************ **@yahoo.comwro te in message
news:11******** **************@ f16g2000cwb.goo glegroups.com.. .
Hi,

I have worked with VB.NET for half a year (semi-newbie). Currently I
am
looking around for some books for those that crossed the starting
hurdle. There are too many books out there-make choosing, a bit of a
gamble.

If you have experience of good VB.NET books on general and office
automattion, you could recommend, it would be greatly appreciated.

Thanks in advance,

Tomas Nordlander
Nov 22 '06 #8
Are you calling *me* a crappy-ass coder? Interesting
how you can pass judgment on someone without even
knowing them.

Robin S.
-----------------------------
<la***********@ hotmail.comwrot e in message
news:11******** **************@ f16g2000cwb.goo glegroups.com.. .
no wonder you're such a crappy ass coder and you're stuck in VB

I've got 2 book shelves of Office Automation books.. typically books
about Excel 97 or Access 97 for example-- are the best resources--
because back in the 'good old days' microsoft didn't have a screwed up
marketing message..

-Larry Linson Jr

RobinS wrote:
>My guess is that he was talking about doing OLE Automation
from VB. I looked for books on that back when I was doing
VB6, but couldn't really find anything, so I figured it out
via trial&error, and macro-record-then-fix-the-code.

My problem with VSTO is that it's a separate product from
Visual Studio, and I'm not into paying that much money for
two of them, when I can generally come up with the same
result using OLE Automation.

Robin S.
-------------------------------
<aa*********@g mail.comwrote in message
news:11******* *************** @b28g2000cwb.go oglegroups.com. ..
I'd look for VSTO books.. or are you talking about VBA?

-Aaron

RobinS wrote:
You're welcome. My copy of Tim Patrick's book came in
the mail yesterday; it looks really good. I'm looking
forward to reading it.

BTW, I don't know of any Office automation books; if
you find one, please let us know. I usually do it by
trial & error. Most of my stuff is Excel, although I've
mucked a little with Outlook and Word.

Robin S.
------------------------------
"Tomas" <to************ **@yahoo.comwro te in message
news:11******* *************** @h48g2000cwc.go oglegroups.com. ..
Thanks Robin (I use 2005 VB.NET), I appriciate the recomendations,
and
will get them ordered.

Tomas :)
RobinS wrote:

I don't know what version of VB.Net you're using. I really
like Francesco Balena's book on VB:The Language. It only
covers the language, not the forms or data. I have the 2005
version, but he has earlier versions as well. This isn't
really a book for someone who's never done .Net; in each
section, he goes from simple examples to complex info
pretty quickly. I learned a lot from reading this book.

He also has a Standard Practices book that I found a lot
of neat information in.

For data binding, check out Brian Noyes's book.

If you want to know how to write a whole app, check out
Tim Patrick's new book, Start-to-Finish Visual Basic 2005.
I have it on order, so I can't vouch for it personally,
but there is a good review on amazon, and chapter 1 was
pretty interesting.

Hope that helps.
Robin S.
----------------------------
"Tomas" <to************ **@yahoo.comwro te in message
news:11******* *************** @f16g2000cwb.go oglegroups.com. ..
Hi,

I have worked with VB.NET for half a year (semi-newbie).
Currently I
am
looking around for some books for those that crossed the starting
hurdle. There are too many books out there-make choosing, a bit
of a
gamble.

If you have experience of good VB.NET books on general and office
automattion, you could recommend, it would be greatly
appreciated.

Thanks in advance,

Tomas Nordlander

Nov 22 '06 #9
well you're a woman and all women are crappy ass coders

-Susie, DBA
RobinS wrote:
Are you calling *me* a crappy-ass coder? Interesting
how you can pass judgment on someone without even
knowing them.

Robin S.
-----------------------------
<la***********@ hotmail.comwrot e in message
news:11******** **************@ f16g2000cwb.goo glegroups.com.. .
no wonder you're such a crappy ass coder and you're stuck in VB

I've got 2 book shelves of Office Automation books.. typically books
about Excel 97 or Access 97 for example-- are the best resources--
because back in the 'good old days' microsoft didn't have a screwed up
marketing message..

-Larry Linson Jr

RobinS wrote:
My guess is that he was talking about doing OLE Automation
from VB. I looked for books on that back when I was doing
VB6, but couldn't really find anything, so I figured it out
via trial&error, and macro-record-then-fix-the-code.

My problem with VSTO is that it's a separate product from
Visual Studio, and I'm not into paying that much money for
two of them, when I can generally come up with the same
result using OLE Automation.

Robin S.
-------------------------------
<aa*********@gm ail.comwrote in message
news:11******** **************@ b28g2000cwb.goo glegroups.com.. .
I'd look for VSTO books.. or are you talking about VBA?

-Aaron

RobinS wrote:
You're welcome. My copy of Tim Patrick's book came in
the mail yesterday; it looks really good. I'm looking
forward to reading it.

BTW, I don't know of any Office automation books; if
you find one, please let us know. I usually do it by
trial & error. Most of my stuff is Excel, although I've
mucked a little with Outlook and Word.

Robin S.
------------------------------
"Tomas" <to************ **@yahoo.comwro te in message
news:11******** **************@ h48g2000cwc.goo glegroups.com.. .
Thanks Robin (I use 2005 VB.NET), I appriciate the recomendations,
and
will get them ordered.

Tomas :)
RobinS wrote:

I don't know what version of VB.Net you're using. I really
like Francesco Balena's book on VB:The Language. It only
covers the language, not the forms or data. I have the 2005
version, but he has earlier versions as well. This isn't
really a book for someone who's never done .Net; in each
section, he goes from simple examples to complex info
pretty quickly. I learned a lot from reading this book.

He also has a Standard Practices book that I found a lot
of neat information in.

For data binding, check out Brian Noyes's book.

If you want to know how to write a whole app, check out
Tim Patrick's new book, Start-to-Finish Visual Basic 2005.
I have it on order, so I can't vouch for it personally,
but there is a good review on amazon, and chapter 1 was
pretty interesting.

Hope that helps.
Robin S.
----------------------------
"Tomas" <to************ **@yahoo.comwro te in message
news:11******** **************@ f16g2000cwb.goo glegroups.com.. .
Hi,

I have worked with VB.NET for half a year (semi-newbie).
Currently I
am
looking around for some books for those that crossed the starting
hurdle. There are too many books out there-make choosing, a bit
of a
gamble.

If you have experience of good VB.NET books on general and office
automattion, you could recommend, it would be greatly
appreciated.

Thanks in advance,

Tomas Nordlander

Nov 27 '06 #10

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by: agi2029 | last post by:
Let's talk about the concept of autonomous AI software engineers and no-code agents. These AIs are designed to manage the entire lifecycle of a software development project—planning, coding, testing, and deployment—without human intervention. Imagine an AI that can take a project description, break it down, write the code, debug it, and then launch it, all on its own.... Now, this would greatly impact the work of software developers. The idea...
1
7366
isladogs
by: isladogs | last post by:
The next Access Europe User Group meeting will be on Wednesday 1 May 2024 starting at 18:00 UK time (6PM UTC+1) and finishing by 19:30 (7.30PM). In this session, we are pleased to welcome a new presenter, Adolph Dupré who will be discussing some powerful techniques for using class modules. He will explain when you may want to use classes instead of User Defined Types (UDT). For example, to manage the data in unbound forms. Adolph will...
0
5270
by: TSSRALBI | last post by:
Hello I'm a network technician in training and I need your help. I am currently learning how to create and manage the different types of VPNs and I have a question about LAN-to-LAN VPNs. The last exercise I practiced was to create a LAN-to-LAN VPN between two Pfsense firewalls, by using IPSEC protocols. I succeeded, with both firewalls in the same network. But I'm wondering if it's possible to do the same thing, with 2 Pfsense firewalls...
1
3917
by: 6302768590 | last post by:
Hai team i want code for transfer the data from one system to another through IP address by using C# our system has to for every 5mins then we have to update the data what the data is updated we have to send another system
3
2793
bsmnconsultancy
by: bsmnconsultancy | last post by:
In today's digital era, a well-designed website is crucial for businesses looking to succeed. Whether you're a small business owner or a large corporation in Toronto, having a strong online presence can significantly impact your brand's success. BSMN Consultancy, a leader in Website Development in Toronto offers valuable insights into creating effective websites that not only look great but also perform exceptionally well. In this comprehensive...

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