|
Windows Communication Foundation 3.5 Unleashed (2nd Edition) (Unleashed) | 
enlarge | Authors: Craig Mcmurty, Nigel Watling, Matt Winkler, Marc Mercuri Publisher: Sams Category: Book
List Price: $49.99 Buy New: $27.45 You Save: $22.54 (45%)
New (35) Used (9) from $27.45
Rating: 3 reviews Sales Rank: 531340
Media: Paperback Edition: 2 Pages: 768 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.7 Dimensions (in): 8.9 x 6.9 x 1.7
ISBN: 0672330245 Dewey Decimal Number: 005.446 EAN: 9780672330247 ASIN: 0672330245
Publication Date: October 17, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
| |
| Also Available In:
|
| Similar Items:
|
| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description
Windows Communication Foundation (WCF) is Microsoft’s dynamic technology for allowing autonomous software to communicate. Superseding earlier technologies such as COM/DCOM, .NET Remoting, ASP.NET Web Services, and the Web Services Enhancements for .NET, WCF provides a single solution that is designed to always be the best way to exchange data among software entities. It also provides the infrastructure for developing the next generation of Web Services, with support for the WS-* family of specifications, and a new serialization system for enhanced performance. In the 3.5 release, WCF has been expanded to include support for REST, JSON, and Syndication (RSS and Atom) services, further broadening the possibilities for what can be done. For information technology professionals, WCF supplies an impressive array of administration tools that enterprises and software vendors can use to reduce the cost of ownership of their solutions without writing a single line of code. Most important, WCF delivers on the promise of model-driven software development with the new software factory approach, by which one can iteratively design solutions in a modeling language and generate executables from lower-level class libraries. Windows Communication Foundation 3.5 Unleashed is designed to be the essential resource for software developers and architects working with WCF. The book guides readers through a conceptual understanding of all the facilities of WCF and provides step-by-step guides to applying the technology to practical problems. As evangelists at Microsoft for WCF, WF, and CardSpace, Craig McMurtry, Marc Mercuri, Nigel Watling, and Matt Winkler are uniquely positioned to write this book. They had access to the development team and to the product as it was being built. Their work with enterprises and outside software vendors has given them unique insight into how others see the software, how they want to apply it, and the challenges they face in doing so. --Gives you nearly 100 best practices for programming with WCF --Provides detailed coverage of how to version services that you will not find anywhere else --Delves into using WCF together with Windows Workflow Foundation (WF) and Windows CardSpace --Provides detailed coverage of the new high-performance data contract serializer for .NET --Walks you through creating secure, reliable, transacted messaging, and how to understand the available options --Introduces you to federated, claims-based security and shows you how to incorporate SAML and WS-Trust security token services into your architecture --Provides step-by-step instructions for how to customize every aspect of WCF --Shows you how to add behaviors, communication channels, message encoders, and transports --Presents options for implementing publish/subscribe solutions --Gives clear guidance on peer-to-peer communications with WCF
|
| Customer Reviews:
Worst Book Purchase of 2008 November 13, 2008 T. Anderson (PA USA) This book reminds me of one of the old WROX books written by 23 different authors who were not told what the title was, and were not allowed to take their ADHD medicine while writing the book. Every chapter is some sort of between content. What I mean by that is they skipped the background, skipped setting up the context, picked one piece of part of a solution, presented it, skipped the explanation, skipped the summary, and moved on to a completely different topic in the next section. They give you the content between all the important stuff. So it is not readable from cover to cover. I am currently putting together an application using WCF and WF Services. I have run into approximately 7 or 8 things I needed to look up. This book provide no guidance on any of them. So it does not make a good reference. The code still does not exist, so I cannot comment on its usability. My recommendation is to definitely look elsewhere when looking for a WCF 3.5 book.
very upset customer November 5, 2008 irate_customer (chi town, il) 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
I agree 100% with a previous customer review, a) no code to download in spite of what is said b) use's safari as a .PDF substitute, which totally stinks. on the back cover it says, "free online Edition with the purchase of this book", this means that only if you are online can the book be accessed, totally useless. You receive 1 token to be able to get 1 chapter in pdf format, well theres 21 chapters. so unless you get the unlimited package, you cannot bring the book to your pc to view. i'm just not impressed with what I read so-far and I really dislike the no code to download problem.
Infuriating - Looks like a sloppy revision October 29, 2008 John Wismar (Collierville, TN) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
This book is pretty infuriating. I've waded through the first 125 pages, and am now looking for a different book to learn about WCF. Let me explain, by way of some examples. Chapter 2 gives a bit of background, and then provides a step-by-step tutorial that shows how to get a WCF service written, running and hosted, and how to write a simple client that connects to the service. To the authors' credit, the sample code as written in the text appears correct. Unfortunately, the step-by-step instructions contain mistakes that prevent the service from working as expected -- or from working at all in some cases. I've worked through a few of those, but I've ended up doing quite a bit more side-research than I would expect while first learning about a new technology! I don't really expect perfection from a book of this size, but I definitely do appreciate it when the authors provide a website for errata that I can look through. Sometimes this helps me identify a problem in the text much faster. And, in fact, the introductory text of this book does claim to have an errata page and downloadable sample code. Unfortunately, when you go to that page, and sign up for their manditory newsletter, it turns out that the errata page and sample code don't actually exist. In other places in the text, the authors direct the reader to a completely different location to find some sample code, but that website doesn't appear to exist at all. Which brings me to a more general criticism. This book appears to be the 3rd (?) edition of a WCF reference. (It's listed as a 2nd edn., but I think it's more.) Unfortunately, it seems that not all of the information has been updated appropriately. Some sections, during rewriting, appear merely to have been duplicated, so that sometimes you can end up with paragraphs (or whole pages) that almost repeat verbatim. There are a number of references - including in the code within the book, and the mysterious, vanishing sample code website - to a previous edition of the book, which was apparently called "Windows Communication Foundation Hands On! Beta Edition". I'm not sure this edition should have made it out of Beta.
|
|
| SEO and Marketing TipsBETA RELEASE | |