Course Information

Course CodeMS2559 (MOC2559) (M2559)
Fee£1295 (Exclusive of VAT)
Offer Details*£995 Saving £300! (Exclusive of VAT) - Offer ends 20th March 2008
DurationFive Days
Delivery FormatInstructor-led
Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
- - 31* - - 7 - - TBA - -

* offer applies to indicated date(s) only

Introduction

This five-day instructor-led course provides students with the knowledge and skills needed to develop applications in Microsoft Visual Basic .NET for the Microsoft .NET platform. The course focuses on user interfaces, program structure, language syntax, and implementation details.

This is the first course in the Visual Basic .NET curriculum and will serve as the entry point for other .NET courses.

Audience

This course is intended for both novice and experienced programmers who have a minimum of three months programming experience and have basic Microsoft Windows navigation skills.

Completion

Prerequisites

Examinations

No examinations are associated with this course.

Materials

The student kit includes a comprehensive workbook and other necessary materials for this class.

Course Outline

Module 1: Getting Started

This module introduces Visual Basic .NET and explains how it fits into the .NET platform. It explains how to use the programming tools in Microsoft Visual Studio .NET and provides enough practice so that students can create their first application in Visual Basic .NET.

Lessons

Lab 1.1: Creating Your First Application

After completing this module, students will be able to:

Module 2: Working with Forms and Controls

This module explains fundamental programming concepts, including event-driven programming, classes, objects, properties, methods, and events. This module also explains how to use forms and controls to create a user interface. This includes the following: how to create a form, set properties, call methods, and write code for events; how to add controls to a form; how to manage multiple forms; how to use message boxes; how to use naming conventions; and how to format and document code.

Lessons

Lab 2.1: Creating the User Interface

After completing this module, students will be able to:

Module 3: Using Variables and Arrays

This module explains how to name, declare, assign values to, and use variables and constants. It explains how to declare variables with different levels of scope, how to create your own data structures, and how to convert variable values from one data type to another. It also describes how to store data in an array.

Lessons

Lab 3.1: Creating and Using Variables

Lab 3.2: Using Structures and Arrays

After completing this module, students will be able to:

Module 4: Working with Procedures

This module describes how to create and use Sub and Function procedures, including predefined functions, and how to structure code for increased reusability.

Lessons

Lab 4.1: Creating and Using Procedures

After completing this module, students will be able to:

Module 5: Decision Structures and Loops

This module explains how to implement decision structures and loop structures to control program output and execution.

Lessons

Lab 5.1: Using Decision Structures

After completing this module, students will be able to:

Module 6: Validating User Input

This module explains how to validate user input at both the field level and the form level. It describes how to handle invalid input by providing error messages and guiding users through the process of finding and fixing errors. It describes how to use control properties and methods to restrict and validate data entry.

Lessons

Lab 6.1: Validating User Input

After completing this module, students will be able to:

Module 7: Object-Oriented Programming in Visual Basic .NET

This module explains how to create and use classes. The module explains the concepts of abstraction, encapsulation, instantiation, initialization, constructors, and destructors. This module also describes inheritance, polymorphism, and namespaces.

Lessons

Lab 7.1: Creating a Derived Class

After completing this module, students will be able to:

Module 8: Handling Errors and Exceptions

This module explains types of errors that can occur in a program and explains how to use the debugging tools provided with Visual Basic .NET to help diagnose and correct the errors. These tools include the Visual Studio .NET debugger, debugging windows, and structured exception handling.

Lessons

Lab 8.1: Implementing Structured Exception Handling

After completing this module, students will be able to:

Module 9: Enhancing the User Interface

This module explains how to create menus, status bars, and toolbars to enhance the usability of an application.

Lessons

After completing this module, students will be able to:

Module 10: Web Forms and XML Web Services

This module explains how to create a Web Forms application and how to invoke a simple XML Web service.

Lessons

Lab 10.1: Creating a Web Application

After completing this module, students will be able to:

Module 11: Using ADO.NET

This module explains how to use ADO.NET with a Windows Forms application to create, read, update, and delete records in Access and SQL Server databases.

Lessons

Lab 11.1: Accessing Data with ADO.NET

After completing this module, students will be able to:

Module 12: Deploying Applications

This module explains how to deploy applications by using Visual Studio .NET. The module also describes deployment options available in Visual Basic .NET, and how to create and configure a setup project for a Windows-based application.

Lessons

Lab 12.1: Deploying an Application

After completing this module, students will be able to: