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I live in Virginia Beach VA area. Is there any specific company you can recommend me that offers good C#.NET training? I looked it up online and found bunch of companies. I just do not want to waste my money or time, since these classes are very expensive

2007-02-08 14:01:03 · 4 answers · asked by Cilek 3 in Computers & Internet Programming & Design

I am a web application developer and I do know how to program in C#.NET. I want to take a class where I advance my knowledge and cover all the related topics to fill in the gaps as I have two young children and not enough time to go through a book. Thanks for the advise anyways.

2007-02-08 14:40:13 · update #1

4 answers

I learned it from a book, although it took a while.

I found these two books to be very good:
Learning C# 2005 - ISBN: 0596102097
Programming C# - ISBN: 0596006993

They're a set. One is a tutorial, the other a reference.

2007-02-08 14:22:49 · answer #1 · answered by so far north 3 · 0 0

I once had an elderly lady for a friend. She had a wonderful little dog. A mix of some sort. She had the dog trained well and it behaved very well. Learn here https://tr.im/MXChN

She kept an uncovered candy dish on her coffee table with candy in it. The dog was forbidden to eat the candy. When she was in the room observing the dog he did not even appear to notice the candy. One day while she was in her dinning room she happened to look in a mirror and could see her dog in the living room. He did not know he was being watched. For several minutes he was sitting in front of the candy bowl staring at the candy. Finally he reached in and took one. He placed it on the table and stared at it, he woofed at it. He stared some more, licked his chops and PUT IT BACK in the bowl and walked away. Did he want the candy, oh yeah. Did he eat it? Nope. They can be trained that well but most, I'll admit, are not trained that well. When I was a young boy, maybe 5 years old. We had a german shepherd. He was very well trained also. My mom could leave food unattended on the table, no problem. She would open the oven door and set a pan roast beef or roast chicken on the door to cool. No problem. He would not touch it, watched or not. But butter? Whole other story. You leave a stick of butter anywhere he could reach and it was gone. He was a large shepherd so there were not many places he could not reach. Really, I think the number of dogs trained to the point they will leave food alone when not being supervised is very small indeed.
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Now if we are talking obedience training, not food grubbing, that is a different story. Way back when I was first learning obedience training one of the final exercises was to put our dogs in a down/stay and not only leave the room but leave the building for 15 minutes. The only person that stayed was our trainer, not the owners. Most of the dogs in my class did not break their stay, which would be an automatic fail. I'm happy to report my dog was one of the ones that passed.

2016-07-18 13:37:25 · answer #2 · answered by maurice 3 · 0 0

i flow to a technical college in Missouri that has an instructor lead CCNA course, and there are different community colleges around that have the comparable element. i might seem around at community colleges which incorporate community and native colleges or universities. good luck!

2016-12-17 05:42:20 · answer #3 · answered by lacross 4 · 0 0

it might be best just to get a book on C# programming; a good one is called 'microsoft C# programming for the absolute beginner'(if you are one) by andy harris

2007-02-08 14:11:27 · answer #4 · answered by aliterit 2 · 0 0

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