Jeffrey richter clr via c 3rd edition




















NET 4. As always, I do review each and every chapter, I apply any reported errata improvements, fix any bugs, typos, or improve wording if a reader reported that something was confusing. I also update version numbers, screen shots, and any current thinking that differs from thinking in the past. However, I have also made some significant enhancements to the 4 th edition.

I have rewritten the Garbage Collection chapter so the material is updated and presented in more organized fashion. The new Reflection APIs have affected other chapters too such as the delegates chapter where I talk about how to dynamically create delegate instances at runtime.

The only language feature new to C 5. NET component that works with different versions of a particular library. In that post, I demonstrated a technique for accessing instance methods that get added in a later version of a library. It is also common for newer versions of the library to introduce new methods that your component might want to call.

If you have never used my AsyncEnumerator class which is part of my free Power Threading library to simplify writing code that performs asynchronous operations, then you can ignore the rest of this blog posting. Hello all, I just wanted to tell everyone that my book, CLR via C 3rd Edition, went to the printer this week and should be in stores in early February! Last week I submitted the reaming chapters for my new book.

It is now being edited and should be available right around the time that Visual Studio launches March 22, NET 4. I have now researched these questions and have the answers. Question 1: Are the new concurrent collection classes in.



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