Professional Visual Studio 2005 fills an important niche: it is for experienced
developers who are new to Visual Studio and need an explanation of the environment and all of its features. The book fulfills that need reasonably well, but it is important to understand what you will and will not get from it.
Of particular value is that it describes and exposes many features that one might otherwise overlook. Visual Studio 2005 is a huge, complex piece of software, and there are capabilities and options (for everything from IDE options to XML to automation) that are not apparent at first.
What it does not do is to address the aspects of Visual Studio that are specific to individual languages. As is appropriate for a book for experienced developers, it does not present much code or “how to” examples. However, it would be helpful if it discussed more of the differences that affect development in languages besides C# and VB. There is a consistent emphasis on those languages and the [...]
It also presents only minimal tutorial aspects. Although the general steps are described, there are not detailed walkthroughs of such steps as how to compile, build, and debug programs in a given language. It would be nice to have a few chapters on such topics as “porting Unix C code to Visual Studio”, or “Moving from Borland C++ Builder to Visual Studio”. Those are not critical omissions, but would be nice for some readers. Finally, the book is primarily about the usage of VS from the point of view of individual developers; it focuses mostly on the “professional” version, not on the specific enterprise/team capabilities (which are briefly covered in one chapter).
In short, this book is a good, comprehensive conceptual “manual” for Visual Studio 2005, especially for VB and C# developers. However, there is still an unfilled niche for a book on “Visual Studio 2005 for C++ Developers”.
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