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Programming WCF Services written by Juval Lowy Studio : O'Reilly Media, Inc. by O'Reilly Media, Inc. Publisher : O'Reilly Media, Inc. Released : 2008-11-10 Availability : Usually ships in 1-2 business days Number of Items : 1 EAN : 9780596521301 Avg. Customer Rating: (based on 51 reviews)
List Price : $49.99 Our Price : $28.44
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Product Description |
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Programming WCF Services is the authoritative, bestselling introduction to Microsoft's unified platform for developing service-oriented applications (SOA) on Windows. Hailed as the most definitive treatment of WCF available, this relentlessly practical book provides insight, not documentation, to help you learn the topics and skills you need for building WCF-based applications that are maintainable, extensible, and reusable. Author Juval Lowy, Microsoft software legend and participant in WCF's original strategic design review, revised this new edition for the latest productivity-enhancing features of C# 3.0 and the .NET 3.5 SP1 Framework. The book also contains Lowy's ServiceModelEx, a framework of useful utilities, tools, and helper classes that let you simplify and automate many tasks, and extend WCF as well. With this book, you will: Learn about WCF architecture and essential building blocks, including key concepts such as reliability and transport session Use built-in features such as service hosting, instance management, concurrency management, transactions, disconnected queued calls, and security Take advantage of relevant design options, tips, and best practices in Lowy's ServiceModelEx framework to increase your productivity and the quality of your WCF services Learn the rationale behind particular design decisions, and discover poorly documented and little-understood aspects of SOA development By teaching you the "why" along with the "how" of WCF programming, Programming WCF Services not only will help you master WCF, it will enable you to become a better software engineer. |
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Excellent WCF Book |
Overall this is an excellent book on WCF. It starts with the basics and works you through some of the more advanced books. It goes into great detail in each case. The examples are straightforward and the explanatory text is concise. I began reading this book with only a basic familiarity with the subject and no commerical experience with WCF. I left with a very good understanding of WCF and how I can now use it.
The sheer size of this book makes it impossible to read in a couple of days. This might scare away potential buyers. I'd like to think of this book as a WCF reference guide as much as a tutorial. Thus you don't really need to read the book cover to cover unless you want to.
The only real downside I found to this book was the fact that it jumped straight into the architecture and justifications for WCF without providing a simple Hello World example from which to get our feet wet. Within the very first chapter I was reading about service and data contracts and how they work and yet I hadn't even written one yet. I believe the book could have started off a little better if a simple Hello World was given so that I could at least compare that to the text as I read along.
Another minor complaint I had is with the chapter lengths. Each chapter is approximately 70-80 pages long. If there were a lot of pictures or sidebars then this would be fine but this is bulk reading. I like to read on chapter boundaries so 70 pages is a huge time sink. I think many of the topics in the book could have been broken up into several related chapters rather than stuffing them all into one. It would have made reading the book a little easier.
Overall this is a must have book for anyone wanting to learn and use WCF. It should have the answers to most questions that might come up. |
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The Merilvingian of WCF |
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This book provides a thorough understanding of WCF and its many parts. I learned a ton in the first chapter alone. The subsequent chapters go into detail about the different pieces mentioned in the first chapter. If you have to know this technology (WCF) get this book. Don't wait just get it. It will take you forever to finish it (700+ pages), so get started ASAP before MS comes out with the next version of it. I met the author at Dev connections is Vegas. The guy thinks (and talks) so quickly after hearing him talk you want to steal his brain. Juval Lowy is the Merilvingian of WCF. |
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A great read for developers with a basic understanding of wcf |
This book is pretty comprehensive. I started learning WCF with the 15-part web series provided by Mrs. Bustamante that accompanies her book. Learning WCF: A Hands-on Guide
I highly recommend her read if you are getting started. However, if you have some familiarity with WCF - this one will take you further. It has plenty of easy-to-understand code samples and a wonderful best practice section near the index. I have been able to incorporate things in this book with business - and that is what really counts.
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Dont expect much |
Writing is art like programming or painting, not every one can be a writer, I cant be a writer, but i know that about myself.
Being technically competent and knowlagable about something does not
nesserarily means you can now go and write a book about it.
The author is a failure when it comes to writing specially technical
books.
a good book writer is for example "Jon Skeet" other writers should take
a look at his style.
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Another great one from Juval |
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I've been a fan of Juval ever since I took an al-day seminar with him at DevConnections a few years ago. He's a great teach and a great writer. However, he is not for beginners. |
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