Complete with a disk of programs and templates, this guide is based on the fact that one doesn't need to know everything about Windows programming to write programs in Windows. The trick is in knowing what is and isn't important. Lafore explains the essentials and leaves out the extras. Features short, pithy, to-the-point chapters that explain the simplest and fastest ways to perform Windows programming--and a disk that speeds the learning process.
Mrs.R.K.Vijayalakshmi, Assistant Professor, Department of ComputerApplications, Mannar Thirumalai Naicker College, Madurai, Tamil Nadu, India. Mrs.N.Hemavathi, Assistant Professor, Department of Computer Science, Mannar Thirumalai Naicker College, Madurai, Tamil Nadu, India. Mrs.K.Vishnupriya, Assistant Professor, Department of Computer Applications, Mannar Thirumalai Naicker College, Madurai, Tamil Nadu, India. Mrs.V.Bhavani, Assistant Professor, Department of Information Technology, Mannar Thirumalai Naicker College, Madurai, Tamil Nadu, India.
A TAPI tutorial for the Windows C++ developer, including several applications and a C++ class library developed to make Windows telephony more accesible. The key audiences are Windows developers and telephony programmers.
Covers basic and advanced controls, Internet and database development Features reusable custom C++ classes to handle real-world tasks Up-to-date coverage of Windows 2000 and Windows CE capabilities Show-and-tell presentation for quick learning See the code and put it to work--fast, easy, and hands on. This quick, visual tutorial uses annotated "snapshots" of real code on every other page to teach you programming theory while providing specific solutions you can use in your own projects. Development solutions cover every current Windows platform, including Windows 95, 98, 2000, NT, or CE. Practical, comprehensive coverage includes: Event-driven programming with the AppWizard and MFC application framework Menus, dialog boxes, and Windows Printing and GDI functions Database programs using MFC classes Internet programs with CGI, sockets, SMTP, ISAPI filters, and ActiveX Reusable custom C++ classes for common programming tasks No matter what flavor of Windows you use, "Windows Programming Programmer's Notebook" will put you "in the picture" and get you up and programming right away.
Currently, there aren't any good books on Windows graphics programming. Programmers looking for help are left to muddle their way through online documentation and API books that don't focus on this topic. This book paves new ground, covering actual graphics implementation, hidden restrictions, and performance issues programmers need to know about.
Get up and running fast with the basics of programming using Java as an example language. This short book gets you thinking like a programmer in an easy and entertaining way. Modern Programming Made Easy teaches you basic coding principles, including working with lists, sets, arrays, and maps; coding in the object-oriented style; and writing a web application. This book is largely language agnostic, but mainly covers the latest appropriate and relevant release of Java, with some updated references to Groovy, Scala, and JavaScript to give you a broad range of examples to consider. You will get a taste of what modern programming has to offer and set yourself up for further study and growth in your chosen language. What You'll Learn Write code using the functional programming style Build your code using the latest releases of Java, Groovy, and more Test your code Read and write from files Design user interfaces Deploy your app in the cloud Who This Book Is For Anyone who wants to learn how to code. Whether you're a student, a teacher, looking for a career change, or just a hobbyist, this book is made for you.
For beginning and intermediate LabVIEW programmers, this introductory guide assumes no prior knowledge of LabVIEW. There are in-depth examples in every chapter, and all the answers and source code is provided on the accompanying CD-ROM.
Windows 2000 and NT offer programmers powerful security tools that few developers use to the fullest -- and many are completely unaware of. In Programming Windows Security, a top Windows security expert shows exactly how to apply them in enterprise applications. Keith Brown starts with a complete roadmap to the Windows 2000 security architecture, describing every component and how they all fit together. He reviews the "actors" in a secure system, including principals, authorities, authentication, domains, and the local security authority; and the role of trust in secure Windows 2000 applications. Developers will understand the security implications of the broader Windows 2000 environment, including logon sessions, tokens, and window stations. Next, Brown introduces Windows 2000 authorization and access control, including groups, aliases, roles, privileges, security descriptors, DACLs and SACLs - showing how to choose the best access strategy for any application. In Part II, he walks developers through using each of Windows 2000's security tools, presenting techniques for building more secure setup programs, using privileges at runtime, working with window stations and user profiles, and using Windows 2000's dramatically changed ACLs. Finally, Brown provides techniques and sample code for network authentication, working with the file system redirector, using RPC security, and making the most of COM/COM+ security.