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 Join Classes button to the HTML


Bring up a project. Put a button in the HTML page that says Join Classes below the line beginning with <form id=..... So, we'll have two different classes and then we'll join them together, produce some results, and then display them. That's the objective here:

<asp:Button ID="Button1" runat="server" Text="Join Classes" />

Next, switch to the Design view and double-click on the Join Classes button. This takes us into Default.aspx.cs. Delete the Page_Load block. The relevant portion of the starting code for this project should look like Figure 15.10.1:

Figure 15.10.1: The starting code section for this project