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| LINQ in Action | 
enlarge | Authors: Fabrice Marguerie, Steve Eichert, Jim Wooley Publisher: Manning Publications Category: Book
List Price: £31.99 Buy New: £14.50 You Save: £17.49 (55%)
New (33) Used (6) from £14.50
Avg. Customer Rating: 3 reviews Sales Rank: 19298
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 600 Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.1 Dimensions (in): 9.2 x 7.4 x 1.3
ISBN: 1933988169 Dewey Decimal Number: 006.7882 EAN: 9781933988160 ASIN: 1933988169
Publication Date: February 4, 2008 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Condition: Brand new item! We deliver internationally! All items dispatched locally. Orders only take 3-8 days!
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| Customer Reviews:
If you need Linq - you nee this book May 13, 2008 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
If you want to learn Linq, whether its data stored in a database, in XML files, DataSets or just in-memory objects this is the book for you.
I found it so easy to understand, and really comprehend. There are lots of examples, but not too many. After reading the first few chapters you become comfortable with the concept and syntax of the new language extensions.
The authors style had just the right combination of light humor and serious programming. He seems able to express complicated issues with the greatest of ease, and obviously has enoumous knowledge on the subject.
If that was not enough, there are forums avalable where you can raise queries and doubts and the author will do his best to accomodate you, again with a nice and easy flowing style.
The book is a 'must have' to any serious Linq programmer (or want-to-be Linq programmer!) and will certainly occupy a prominent place on my bookshelf.
Highly recommended!
Regards, Martin.
Good job April 28, 2008 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
Very good book, I have read entirely in few days. The book goes beyond basical topics related to Linq and Linq2XXX, it also talk about different ways to use linq and how it could be adopdted either in RAD or full layered scenarios. Good code samples included.
A must read on LINQ February 25, 2008 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
This book is the fruit of a collaborative work. In a time of globalization, where ideas know no frontiers, this is a refreshing take on a hot topic like LINQ.
We have here three well known experts in their fields coming together to produce an excellent text book on LINQ. The introduction is an appetizer for what comes next.
LINQ is not a language you will fall in love with at first sight. It demands that you get to know it but when you do you're hooked.
In this book we get a good summary outlining why we can't live without LINQ anymore. Also, a nice touch from the authors is that the code is written in both C# and VB.NET. It's a pity that this is not continued throughout the book. However, according to the writers, all the samples used in the book are available for download in both languages. So guys you are forgiven!
Because LINQ introduces new features, a full chapter is dedicated to C# 3.0 and VB.NET 9.0 enhancements. This chapter is for me the weakest part of the book. Even if LINQ in action is not intended for beginners, I would suggest to the readers to skip this section and come back to it later, because it will give intermediate developers the idea that LINK is only comprehendible by experts. It is too complicated too early in the book.
The rest of the book is cleverly divided into roughly three parts: LINQ for objects, LINQ for XML and LINQ for SQL. It is a very good idea indeed to have pushed the SQL part further down, after all, LINQ is much more than a mere language for relational databases. It is an advanced technology with many capabilities. For example, Object paradigm is at the heart of LINQ and this is well demonstrated throughout the book. To conclude I would warmly recommend this book but for intermediate developers not for real beginners because some of the explanations introduced by the authors are not for the faint hearted! I also give credit to the authors for creating from a blank canvas something as colorful as this book about LINQ. A hard challenge when you consider that nobody has really fully embraced the concept in a commercial application to date.
It's also a first book for Fabrice Marguerie, who I know well by his blog. Fabrice is a strong minded person, an expert in Object Relational Mapping, which gives you even more reason to purchase this book.
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