Microsoft Jscript.NET Programming by Justin Rogers

Microsoft Jscript.NET Programming



Download Microsoft Jscript.NET Programming




Microsoft Jscript.NET Programming Justin Rogers ebook
Page: 357
Format: pdf
Publisher: Sams
ISBN: 0672321483,


From the beginning, Microsoft's .NET framework was designed to support a broad range of different programming languages on a Common Language Runtime (CLR). NET applications, in any .Net compatible language (Jscript.Net, C#, VB.Net, VC++.Net and many others). That's what we are using on the front-lines. So these tools are already available on every Windows 8 NET utilities to your path. Contains the JScript runtime and classes that support compilation and code generation using the JScript language. NET Framework runtime actually contains MSBuild and compilers for C#, Visual Basic, JScript, and MSIL! It is perhaps most similar to Microsoft's JScript, especially in that both are .NET languages. It's just another example of why we programmers are so frustrated w/Microsoft. JScript, C#, Visual Basic) and MS Windows XP. Their development tools are designed to lock the user into Microsoft's .NET programming languages (e.g. As a result, Microsoft came up with a managed language that provided direct access to the .NET Framework classes. NET Parallel Programming · ADO.NET (Managed Providers . On a 64-bit system, you should first add the same path followed by \x64 , for those tools that have 64-bit versions. Of course, a programming language's implementation makes sense only if it takes place in a runtime environment where instructions can be compiled and run. Contains the Visual Basic .NET runtime and the classes that support Provides services supporting data type conversion, method parameter manipulation, mathematics, remote and local program invocation, application environment management, and supervision of managed and unmanaged applications. I mean to continue writing it, but unfortunately, Microsoft's (entirely sensible) policy is that only full time employees get to post to MSDN blogs. That's "C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft SDKs\ Windows\v8.0A\bin\NETFX 4.0 Tools" in a default installation. NOT JSCRIPT, whatever the heck that is. If you don't know anything at all about programming, well you should probably get a book oriented at learning to program (DON'T learn JavaScript expecting it to help you program in UnityScript — it's more of a cross between the ECMAScript standard at least somewhat, it varies in many ways from other implementations of JavaScript that are based on the same standard.