sarang said:You can look at Pluralsight courses. They are super awesome.
Another approach I typically follow is MSDN training kits on various topics.
One must read book would be CLR via C# if you wanna learn the language as it should be.
Santa Maria! said:Pro C# and the .NET 4 Platform 2010 is what you're looking for. It doesn't waste time on explaining baby stuff like if-else, loops etc. It gives you a solid introduction to how the .NET stack is structured, CLR et al.
It's a massive book, but well worth it.
Congrats on your job. May I ask where you landed it? (It's okay if you don't want to say). Just curious cuz I just graduated too, and am hunting for a .NET job.
Santa Maria! said:Pro C# and the .NET 4 Platform 2010 is what you're looking for. It doesn't waste time on explaining baby stuff like if-else, loops etc. It gives you a solid introduction to how the .NET stack is structured, CLR et al.
It's a massive book, but well worth it.
Congrats on your job. May I ask where you landed it? (It's okay if you don't want to say). Just curious cuz I just graduated too, and am hunting for a .NET job.
C# 4.0 In A Nutshell
C# In Depth
Clr Via C#
Pro C# 2010 And The .NET 4 Platform
Head First Design Patterns
Head First Software Development
Head First Object-Oriented Analysis & Design
Effective C#: 50 Specific Ways To Improve Your C#
More Effective C#: 50 Specific Ways To Improve Your C#
Clean Code: A Handbook Of Agile Software Craftsmanship
Agile Principles, Patterns, And Practices In C#
The Art Of Unit Testing With Examples In .Net
UML Distilled: A Brief Guide To The Standard Object Modeling Language
Refactoring: Improving The Design Of Existing Code
Bump. Can anyone please put some light into it?