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Microsoft Visual Studio .NET Professional Upgrade
 
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Microsoft Visual Studio .NET Professional Upgrade

Other products by Microsoft
Platform:   Windows 2000 / NT / XP
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (18 customer reviews)

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System Requirements

  • Platform:   Windows 2000 / NT / XP
  • Media: CD-ROM
  • Item Quantity: 1
 See more system requirements

Product Details

  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds
  • Shipping: Currently, item can be shipped only within the U.S.
  • ASIN: B00005RV50
  • Date first available at Amazon.com: January 3, 2002
  • Average Customer Review: 3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (18 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #10,103 in Software (See Bestsellers in Software)

    Popular in these categories: (What's this?)

    #6 in  Software > Programming > Programming Languages > Java
    #32 in  Software > Programming > Programming Languages > Visual Basic
    #33 in  Software > Programming > Programming Languages > C & C++
  • Discontinued by manufacturer: Yes

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Product Description

Amazon.com Review

Visual Studio .NET is a superb, next-generation development tool. At its heart is the .NET Framework, a runtime engine and class library that enables rapid application building for both Windows and Web applications. The runtime engine handles housekeeping tasks, like memory management, while also providing fine-grained security and version awareness. The class library reduces the code needed to build rich applications. Visual Studio .NET also provides a slick visual environment, with features like tabbed and docking windows, dynamic online help, and automatic code completion and hints.

The common runtime is language-neutral so, for example, Visual Basic programmers can use components written in C# and vice versa. Other languages, such as COBOL and FORTRAN, can plug into Visual Studio, and Microsoft provides a version of the Java language called J#.

Overall, Visual Studio .NET is a radical break from the past for Microsoft. C# is an entirely new language, aimed at C and C++ programmers looking for something safer and more productive. Visual Basic .NET is a new twist on the old Microsoft favorite, losing compatibility with earlier versions, but gaining full object orientation as well as access to all the .NET libraries. These two languages, along with J#, have full support for the visual design tools in Visual Studio .NET. Also included is JScript .NET, Microsoft's version of JavaScript, although this comes without a form designer. Visual C++ is similar to earlier versions and is the only compiler included that can build old-style Windows executables. With a compiler switch, it can also target .NET, making it particularly flexible.

Visual Studio .NET has two distinct form designers. Windows Forms are for traditional Windows applications, but managed by the common runtime. Web Forms are ASP.NET pages, which means they run on Web servers and work over the Internet. Microsoft has made designing and coding Windows Forms and Web Forms as similar as possible so that both types of applications can share components and much of the complexity of coding Web applications is kept hidden. Another key feature is Web services, which lets developers create an XML interface for an application so that it can be called across the Web or from any platform or language. XML support generally is strong, with a range of classes for parsing and transforming XML data. There is also a visual designer for XML Schema.

There are a few points against Visual Studio .NET. One is that, like earlier versions, it only creates applications that run on Windows. Web applications are a partial exception, in that they support cross-platform clients, but deployment requires a Windows Web server. Another factor is that, with its multiple compilers and mountains of documentation, Visual Studio .NET eats up gigabytes of disk space, and the IDE tends to be slow with less than around 384 MB RAM. Serious developers will take this in stride, but casual users could have difficulty. Fortunately, the applications created have more modest system requirements, although Windows 95 is not supported. Finally, developers coming from earlier editions face a lot of learning due to radical changes in both Visual Basic and ASP.

Despite these minor issues and a steep learning curve, Visual Studio .NET is an extremely versatile, sophisticated, and capable development tool. --Tim Anderson, Amazon.co.uk



Amazon.com Product Description

Visual Studio .NET Professional enables developers to build the next generation of Internet applications with XML Web services, database applications with XML, and RAD for the .NET Server. It enables developers to build solutions for the broadest range of clients--from Web applications to Windows to thin-client devices to smart devices. The RAD capabilities provide a shared IDE and a choice of programming languages, including Visual Basic, C++, C#, and Java. Visual Studio .NET Professional is RAD for the programmable Web.

In XML, Visual Studio .NET developers can build data-driven applications using built-in ADO.NET tools that target a variety of databases, including SQL Server, Oracle, or any other XML source. With support for XML, ADO.NET enables developers to share data across computing platforms. Additionally, Visual Studio .NET includes the Microsoft Data Engine (MSDE), a SQL Server-compatible database that provides programmers with a viable development database and natively supports XML.

Visual Studio .NET allows programmers to create and deploy critical server-based programming. With Visual Studio .NET, developers can visually compose middle-tier components using the Visual Component Designer (VCD). The VCD enables developers to drag and drop nonvisual objects such as message queues, timers, and event logs to a design surface, automatically discovering all necessary server-based resources and configuring required components.

Note: This is an upgrade version. Any owner of Visual Studio 97 or Visual Studio 6.0 and later--except standard versions--is eligible for the upgrade.


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Customer Reviews

18 Reviews
5 star:
 (8)
4 star:
 (4)
3 star:
 (2)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:
 (4)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.7 out of 5 stars (18 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
41 of 42 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Microsoft gets serious about Web development, March 8, 2002
By Peter Mackay "surgeonsmate" (Campbell, ACT Australia) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
I've just put my Javascript Bible up for sale. A great language to be sure, but I'm tired of stuffing about writing code that works differently on various platforms and browsers.

And my ASP 3.0 Professional book. No more.

Microsoft have lowered the bar for active, data-driven website development. It's almost as easy as drop and drag.

OK. You still have to know how HTML works and how a database is put together and be able to write code without tripping over your feet. Not all that difficult, and there are any number of books to help you along.

But the bottom line for Visual Studio.NET is that Microsoft has worked out that the Internet is where widely distributed applications are happening, and it's no good delivering a development environment aimed at the desktop and having a second rate product for the Web.

Make no mistake, you can still use Visual Studio to develop superb desktop applications, and I purely love some of the goodies they have included, like being able to set transparency of objects on the fly - you want a screen that gently shimmers into view, or a form that you can see through to the information below, it's easy - lots of goodies like that. The development environment is just wonderful. It makes writing and testing code a snap.

But this is Visual Studio built from the ground up around the Internet in general and the Web in particular. The biggest change is that instead of having HTML and code mixed up together on the same page, a real nightmare to maintain, you now have two pages, one to lay out your web page exactly as you want, another for the "code-behind" where you set down the code. At its most basic, you have a button on one page, and the code that handles the button click on another that the user never sees.

And remember how I have my JavaScript Bible up for sale? The controls and the code in .NET work for any browser, and you don't have to mix Javascript client-side and VBscript server-side any more. The framework handles all that for you and different code gets sent to different browsers automatically. A *huge* saving in development time and the elimination of a maintenance nightmare.

In fact, it doesn't matter what language you use to write your code in. Visual Basic, C++, Java, Microsoft's new C# (which is best described as C++ without pointers), or any of the dozens of old and new languages being made available for the environment.

There's stacks more to say about Visual Studio.NET, but I don't have the space here. Buy it and try it - with the rebate it's inexpensive, or you can try the whole product for 60 days by asking Microsoft for an eval version - it's on their website somewhere - not too hard to find.

My opinion of VS.NET is that it's a bold new advance on the previous version, one that is the result of a lot of consultation with real-life developers, and one that is designed for Web development. Serious web development.

It also lowers the bar for developing sophisticated web pages. Makes web coding an order of magnitude easier. There is going to be a huge cottage industry of website design based around this product, and a smart cookie can turn out good websites for small business and community groups at the rate of one a night and a few on weekends. Seriously, you can make back the price of this product in a few hours, it's that good. Let others struggle with Perl and cross-browser issues and maintenance tangles - this is the fast track right here.

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23 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Rebate GOTCHA!, May 2, 2002
I like the new IDE. BIG point to remember, in order to get the MS rebate for the upgrade edition, you NEED the box top with the UPC symbol of the qualifying software. Luckily I kept mine from VB6!
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16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The Best Studio ensemble but not perfect., May 1, 2002
By JOHN (CA United States) - See all my reviews
This latest release by Microsoft is the best studio package money can buy. But, there are some shortcomings, Where is the VC++ .Net Forms designer? No doubt a ploy by Microsquash to gently twist the arms of VC++ programmers to at least consider using their proprietary new language Visual C#(Sharp) as their new primary language.(VC# .Net has a Forms Designer)
Visual Basic .Net is now a joy to use relative to previous versions with the many new powerful code features.(ADO.NET is here to stay, ready or not, painful at first, but like Hell Week in football, you get used to it.)
Visual C# seems interesting, a shotgun-marriage of VB and VC++(Good Lord!)
Still waiting for my free copy of MS JAVA# .Net to arrive.(A coupon comes in the box)
The IDE is the best ever made by any software manufacturer. SUPERB IDE!
Multitude of new features in IDE that make programming life easier.

The Dynamic Help feature(used with code editor and forms designer is very handy)

If you are still using Visual Studio 6 I highly recommend the purchase of Visual Studio .Net Pro.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

1.0 out of 5 stars Software ad description misinterpeted
Dealing with Cheepmac is pretty risky
When I received the software package, it is an upgrade for Microsoft Visual Studio.net 2002 and not Visual Studio 6. Read more
Published on February 12, 2004 by John

3.0 out of 5 stars Good for web, weak on native C++
This edition of Visual Studio is geared heavily towards web and .NET development. If you're still a native C++ programmer, the interface is going to feel clunky and project... Read more
Published on April 17, 2003

3.0 out of 5 stars Not as good as eclipse
Up until a year ago I think I would have been praising Microsoft for yet another great product...then IBM release eclipse 2.0, and everything changed. Read more
Published on August 28, 2002 by Anthony G. Laforge

5.0 out of 5 stars MS shoots and scores
I've been using VS.NET for about 4 months now, and everyday I get more excited about it capabilities. I'm an experienced VB5/6 programmer and VB.NET is a whole new level. Read more
Published on August 27, 2002

5.0 out of 5 stars Adios Java!
Finished a Java course a few months ago and thought, ok, as far as oop goes, Java is top notch, but boy, oh boy, do the IDE's out there for Java stink! Read more
Published on July 18, 2002

4.0 out of 5 stars Impressed with .Net
I purchased VS.Net last month, got it installed with no problems. I really enjoy the improvements made to the IDE, especially the way the different toolboxes are set up. Read more
Published on July 8, 2002 by Carlos A. Mercado

1.0 out of 5 stars CD Does not Load, Jump Thru Hoops For Rebate
I bought my VS7 Professional Upgrade (06/02) and have encountered 2 major problems.

First the CD's do not install. There is a grinding noise in my CD-ROM. Read more

Published on June 26, 2002

4.0 out of 5 stars Must buy for MS programmer
If you are working with MS this is a must buy, particularly if you qualify for the rebates. MS is above average in their rebate process too. Definately worth a look.
Published on June 19, 2002

5.0 out of 5 stars .NET .GET
This studio is leagues beyond the last. Microsoft is easing the burden of developers by simplifying distributed application development using .NET. Read more
Published on May 24, 2002 by joiquank

1.0 out of 5 stars Prepare for a Nightmare
I have installed the Visual Studio .NET without any errors, but the development environment will not start. Read more
Published on May 8, 2002

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