Book Image

Beginning C# 7 Hands-On ??? Advanced Language Features

By : Tom Owsiak
Book Image

Beginning C# 7 Hands-On ??? Advanced Language Features

By: Tom Owsiak

Overview of this book

Beginning C# 7 Hands-On – Advanced Language Features assumes that you’ve mastered the basic elements of the C# language and that you're now ready to learn the more advanced C# language and syntax, line by line, in a working Visual Studio environment. You'll learn how to code advanced C# language topics including generics, lambda expressions, and anonymous methods. You'll learn to use query syntax to construct queries and deploy queries that perform aggregation functions. Work with C# and SQL Server 2017 to perform complex joins and stored procedures. Explore advanced file access methods, and see how to serialize and deserialize objects – all by writing working lines of code that you can run within Visual Studio. This book is designed for beginner C# developers who have mastered the basics now, and anyone who needs a fast reference to using advanced C# language features in practical coding examples. You'll also take a look at C# through web programming with web forms. By the time you’ve finished this book, you’ll know all the critical advanced elements of the C# language and how to program everything from C# generics to XML, LINQ, and your first full MVC web applications. These are the advanced building blocks that you can then combine to exploit the full power of the C# programming language, line by line.
Table of Contents (35 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Author
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface

Adding a summarize button to the HTML


Bring up a project. In the basic HTML, delete the <div> lines, as you won't need them. Now, let's add a button. The only thing the button will do is to summarize some information for us.

Go to Toolbox and grab a Button control. Drag and drop it below the line beginning with <form id=..., and change the text on the button to say Summarize. Now, close this with a <br> tag and keep the Label control as usual.

Now, go to Default.aspx, and enter the Design view. You'll see one button for the interface, which says Summarize and looks like Figure 4.4.1:

Figure 4.4.1: The simple interface for this project

Now, double-click on the Summarize button. This takes us into Default.aspx.cs. Delete the Page_Load block. Your initial code screen for this project should look like Figure 4.4.2:

Figure 4.4.2: The initial Default.aspx.cs code for this project

Constructing a delegate

First, in order to make the delegate, above the line beginning with public partial...