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C#
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Every 10 years or so a new approach to programming hits like a tsunami. In the early 1980s, the
new technologies were Unix, which could be run on a desktop, and a powerful new language called
C, developed by AT&T. The early 90's brought Windows and C++. Each of these developments
represented a sea change in the way you approached programming. .NET and C# are the next wave,
and this book is intended to help you ride it.
Microsoft has `bet the company' on .NET. When a company of their size and influence spends
billions of dollars and reorganizes its entire corporate structure to support a new platform, it is
reasonable for programmers to take notice. It turns out that .NET represents a major change in the
way you'll think about programming. It is, in short, a new development platform designed to
facilitate object-oriented Internet development. The programming language of choice for this
object-oriented Internet-centric platform is C# which builds on the lessons learned from C (high
performance), C++ (object-oriented structure), Java (security), and Visual Basic (rapid
development) to create a new language ideally suited for developing component-based n-tier
distributed web applications.
Ko'chirish
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