Scathing because this book is almost as hawwt as myself!!
Let’s not kid ourselves – the vast majority of my audience does not care about the content of this review.
One of the perks of being part of the Edmonton .NET User Group executive is that I get to review various technical material sent to us. I was lucky enough that the first book we received was O'Reilly's “Visual Studio Hacks” (ISBN 0-596-00847-3) by James Avery .
There are books that are considered to be “definitive” for a particular programming language (for example, Dino Esposito’s Programming ASP.NET, or the O’Reilly “Rhino” book on Javascript). This book is the definitive book for the Visual Studio IDE.
The book covers many different aspects of the Visual Studio IDE, from simple shortcut keys that most people might be unaware of to add-ins like TestDriven.NET that can potentially change the way you do software development, period. I am pretty confident in saying that no matter what your level of familiarity with Visual Studio, you will definitely get some value and knowledge that you didn’t get before – I mean, there are 100 separate tips/tools in this book.
The good:
The bad:
The mildly disturbing:
With that uncomfortableness out of the way, a brief explanation of the positive end of the Justice Gray rating scale:
In closing, I would definitely say to get the fireplace and the Village People CD going because I would go ALL THE WAY with Visual Studio Hacks without reservation. Get your freak on today and order it here!
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