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Professional Team Foundation Server 2013 1st Edition
- Provides a broad overview of Team Foundation Server and Visual Studio Online for developers, software project managers, testers, business analysts, and others wanting to learn how to use TFS
- Gives TFS administrators the tools they need to efficiently monitor and manage the TFS environment
- Covers core TFS functions including project management, work item tracking, version control, test case management, build automation, reporting
- Explains extensibility options and how to write extensions for TFS
- Helps certification candidates prepare for the Microsoft Team Foundation Server 2013 certification exam
- ISBN-101118836340
- ISBN-13978-1118836347
- Edition1st
- PublisherWrox
- Publication dateMay 19, 2014
- LanguageEnglish
- Dimensions7.2 x 1.9 x 9.2 inches
- Print length912 pages
Editorial Reviews
From the Inside Flap
A comprehensive guide to Microsoft Team Foundation Server 2013
Team Foundation Server has become the leading Microsoft productivity tool for software management, and this guide covers what developers need to know to use it effectively. Written by Microsoft insiders and MVPs, the book follows the tutorial style of Wrox’s successful Professional guides. The 2013 release expands beyond the Microsoft developer community to include supporting iOS, MacOS, Android, and Java development. Offering a specific focus on the significant new features of the TFS 2013 release, the guide still provides step-by-step instructions for using TFS to manage and deliver software products in an enterprise.
Professional Team Foundation Server 2013:
- Provides a broad overview of Team Foundation Server for developers, software project managers, testers, business analysts, and others wanting to learn how to use TFS
- Gives TFS administrators the tools they need to efficiently monitor and manage the TFS environment
- Covers core TFS functions including project management, work item tracking, version control, test case management, build automation, and reporting
- Explains support for Git version control.
- Helps certification candidates prepare for the Microsoft Team Foundation Server 2013 certification exam
Wrox Professional guides are planned and written by working programmers to meet the real-world needs of programmers, developers, and IT professionals. Focused and relevant, they address the issues technology professionals face every day. They provide examples, practical solutions, and expert education in new technologies, all designed to help programmers do a better job.
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From the Back Cover
A comprehensive guide to Microsoft Team Foundation Server 2013
Team Foundation Server has become the leading Microsoft productivity tool for software management, and this guide covers what developers need to know to use it effectively. Written by Microsoft insiders and MVPs, the book follows the tutorial style of Wrox’s successful Professional guides. The 2013 release expands beyond the Microsoft developer community to include supporting iOS, MacOS, Android, and Java development. Offering a specific focus on the significant new features of the TFS 2013 release, the guide still provides step-by-step instructions for using TFS to manage and deliver software products in an enterprise.
Professional Team Foundation Server 2013:
- Provides a broad overview of Team Foundation Server for developers, software project managers, testers, business analysts, and others wanting to learn how to use TFS
- Gives TFS administrators the tools they need to efficiently monitor and manage the TFS environment
- Covers core TFS functions including project management, work item tracking, version control, test case management, build automation, and reporting
- Explains support for Git version control.
- Helps certification candidates prepare for the Microsoft Team Foundation Server 2013 certification exam
Wrox Professional guides are planned and written by working programmers to meet the real-world needs of programmers, developers, and IT professionals. Focused and relevant, they address the issues technology professionals face every day. They provide examples, practical solutions, and expert education in new technologies, all designed to help programmers do a better job.
Programmer Forums
Join our Programmer to Programmer forums to ask and answer programming questions about this book, join discussions on the hottest topics in the industry, and connect with fellow programmers from around the world.
Code Downloads
Take advantage of free code samples from this book, as well as code samples from hundreds of other books, all ready to use.
Read More
Find articles, e-books, sample chapters, and tables of contents for hundreds of books, and more reference resources on programming topics that matter to you.
About the Author
Steven St. Jean is a Senior ALM Consultant with Microsoft’s Premier Support for Developers team
Damian Brady is a Solution Architect and State Manager for SSW in Brisbane, Australia, specializing in application lifecycle management and ASP.NET development.
Ed Blankenship works at Microsoft as the Product Manager for Visual Studio Online, Team Foundation Server, and Application Lifecycle Management.
Martin Woodward is a Principal Program Manager on the Visual Studio team at Microsoft.
Grant Holliday is a Senior Service Engineer for Microsoft Visual Studio Online.
Edward Thomson is a Senior Software Development Engineer at Microsoft where he develops Team Foundation Server and Visual Studio tools with an emphasis on version control and Git libraries.
Product details
- Publisher : Wrox; 1st edition (May 19, 2014)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 912 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1118836340
- ISBN-13 : 978-1118836347
- Item Weight : 3.3 pounds
- Dimensions : 7.2 x 1.9 x 9.2 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #3,685,792 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #1,093 in Software Design & Engineering
- #4,855 in Software Development (Books)
- #16,736 in Business Technology
- Customer Reviews:
About the authors

Martin Woodward is currently the Program Manager for the Microsoft Visual Studio Team Foundation Server Cross-Platform Tools Team. Before joining Microsoft, Martin was voted Team System MVP of the Year and has spoken about Team Foundation Server at events internationally. Not only does Martin bring a unique insight into the inner workings of the product he has experience from over a half-decade of real world use at companies big and small that he is always happy to share. When not working or speaking, Martin can be found at his blog http://www.woodwardweb.com.

Hi! I am a Product Manager at Microsoft for Visual Studio Online and ALM on the Developer Tools Marketing team. I was previously a Program Manager for Visual Studio India and the Test & Lab Management (Visual Studio ALM) and the Product Owner for the Lab Management scenarios.
Before joining Microsoft, I was the ALM/TFS Practice Technical Lead with Imaginet (formerly Notion Solutions) and an Application Lifecycle Management (ALM) Consultant. My expertise is in the Microsoft Visual Studio ALM toolset and Team Foundation Server in which I have been actively using, managing, and implementing for nearly eight years since the beginning of those products in 2005. I have been awarded since 2008 as a Microsoft MVP in Visual Studio ALM, Team Foundation Server and Visual Studio Team System until joining Microsoft in 2012.
I was voted as the Microsoft MVP of the Year (Visual Studio ALM, TFS) for 2010 by fellow MVPs which has been a great honor in my career to have been selected by my peers for the award.
You can find me blogging at http://www.edsquared.com, tweeting at @EdBlankenship (http://www.twitter.com/edblankenship), and more information on my LinkedIn profile page: http://www.linkedin.com/in/edblankenship.
As an ALM Consultant, I assisted organizations with improving their development lifecycle by suggesting improvements to their processes and implementing Application Lifecycle Management tools to assist with that improvement. By using Visual Studio ALM and Team Foundation Server, customers can immediately see value from their improvements.
I was previously the Release Engineering Manager at Infragistics where I led a multi-year TFS & Visual Studio Team System implementation to improve the development process lifecycle.
I am the lead author of the Wrox Professional Team Foundation Server 2012 and Wrox Professional Team Foundation Server 2010 books, have been a technical editor for the Wrox Silverlight 1.0, Silverlight 2 Developer's Guide, Silverlight 3 Programmer's Reference, and Silverlight 2 Bible books, author of numerous articles, and have spoken at various user groups, events, radio shows, and conferences including Microsoft TechEd.

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Damian is a Cloud Advocate specializing in DevOps and MLOps. After spending a year in Toronto, Canada, he returned to Australia in 2018.
Formerly a software engineer at Octopus Deploy and a Microsoft MVP, he has a background in software development and consulting in a broad range of industries. He regularly speaks at conferences, User Groups, and other events around the world.
Most of the time you'll find him talking to software engineers, IT pros and managers to help them get the most out of their DevOps strategies, or writing and recording online content.

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Over the years Team Foundation Server has kept expanding, it's a wonder that this book isn't shipped in a box and that it doesn't have 6 volumes to cover all the topics. Which brings me to the primary reason I've chosen not to award it 5 stars, but 4. The book tries to cover every bit of Team Foundation Server and some bits of Visual Studio and as such can't cover all of the area's with the care and depth they deserve. Because of that a number of chapters left me puzzled or not satisfied. My book case has a bunch of other books that cover these individual topics in much more depth, plus the book links to a lot of external resources, blog posts, magazine articles and MSDN docs.These at least help you find all the important items that are available out there.
Any reader, no matter how basic or advanced will find a couple of gems somewhere in this 900 page tome. It's a very valuable reference guide to using and administering Team Foundation Server. But it won't tell you everything you'll need to know to be an instant guru.
Let's go through the chapters...
The book takes you all the way from explaining the components of TFS, picking an installation type, sizing your hardware and getting TFS installed and finally connecting your client (Visual Studio or Eclipse) to it. If you're a long term user of TFS, you can probably skip these sections.
Then it dives into Source control and, new in this version, has a couple of dedicated sections on Git. While thorough in explaining many concepts, and offering a lot of options, I felt that it could have been very helpful to provide beginners with some sort of cook book to guide them through the most important decisions. A lot of space is taken up by all the screenshots that take you through the steps, which are very helpful to a new user, but as advanced user I was hoping some of that space would be used for some pro tips and tricks to make life easier. Luckily there are plenty of links to external resources, such as the ALM Rangers Version Control Guides. The section on working with non-visual studio team members is very helpful for team in that situation.
Next is a short section on Work Item Tracking and Process templates, probably a topic that could fill a 500 page book in itself. Concepts like custom controls are introduced, but not really explained. Especially the fact that custom controls are specific to Web Access, Visual Studio Version and Eclipse, would be an important thing to include.The book doesn't really cover the proper use of the different process templates that ship out of the box, you'll need to find that information elsewhere.
Then a couple of really short topics on teams, reporting, and project server fly by. Good to know that it's there, but one needs to dive deeper elsewhere to really learn how these items work.
By now we're in chapter 17 and dive into a solid section on Team Build and Release Management.Covering all the main concepts of Team Build and a short overview on MsBuild. For more details on this topic I can really recommend the book Inside the "Microsoft Build Engine: Using MsBuild and Team Foundation Build". The sections on Release Manager explain how to setup the Release Management Server and very quickly explain the different tasks and workflow actions that ship with the product. Enough to give you an global understanding, but by far not enough to allow you to build a release workflow for a reasonably complex project.
Then we dive into a whole bunch of Administration topics, from scaling and recovering your TFS server to monitoring, upgrades and finally customizing your server. In this section you'll also find a few pages on Microsoft Test Manager and a lot on Lab Management. The book ends with a very short chapter that gives you a couple of pointers to extending Team Foundation server.
As you can see, the book covers all the nooks and crannies of TFS using almost 900 pages and it weighs a ton, but after reading it cover to cover you'll probably be left with a lot of question that you'll need to research in other books and in the online resources.
What I'd like, and what would be more helpful to me would be a Jefferson's Bible with Team Foundation Server 2013 content only. Those who are familiar with other products would be well served by a chapter outlining the differences without the extraneous digressions for those of us who are only interested in TFS 2013 in the main content of the book.
Top reviews from other countries
The book is written so well that it took me only one reading before I was confident to set up our own TFS 2013 server at work and manage it.