Pro Visual Studio 2005 Team System Application Development

Pro Visual Studio 2005 Team System Application Development  eBooks & eLearning

Posted by Alexpal at June 13, 2009
Pro Visual Studio 2005 Team System Application Development

Pro Visual Studio 2005 Team System Application Development by Steve Shrimpton
Publisher: Apress | Number Of Pages: 792 | Publication Date: 2006-08-15 | ISBN-10: 159059682X | PDF | 14 Mb

Pro Visual Studio 2005 Team System Application Development brings Visual Studio 2005 Team System to life. Youll learn how to effectively use Team System to develop new functionality for large distributed systems. The book accomplishes this not just by describing the Team System features, but also by leading you through a fictitious, though realistic, project.
The project takes place in a large, distributed organization with a mix of existing systems. Risks exist in the possible disruption of the current business enterprise system, and careful planning and phasing of deliverables are necessary. New and modified applications must work with existing parts of the system as iterations of the project move through testing to deployment, in order to bring the project to a successful conclusion.

Pro Visual Studio 2005 Team System Application Development [Repost]  eBooks & eLearning

Posted by ChrisRedfield at Dec. 20, 2014
Pro Visual Studio 2005 Team System Application Development [Repost]

Steve Shrimpton - Pro Visual Studio 2005 Team System Application Development
Published: 2006-08-11 | ISBN: 159059682X | PDF | 792 pages | 24 MB

Apress Pro Visual Studio 2005 Team System: Application Design  eBooks & eLearning

Posted by MrLAG at Jan. 31, 2007
Apress Pro Visual Studio 2005 Team System: Application Design


Paperback: 792 pages
Publisher: Apress (August 15, 2006)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 159059682X
ISBN-13: 978-1590596821


Book Description

Pro Visual Studio 2005 Team System Application Development brings Visual Studio 2005 Team System to life. You'll learn how to effectively use Team System to develop new functionality for large distributed systems. The book accomplishes this not just by describing the Team System features, but also by leading you through a fictitious, though realistic, project.