Windows Developer Power Tools: Turbocharge Windows Development with More Than 140 Free and Open Source Tools

November 21, 2009 · Posted in DotNetNuke 

Product Description

Software developers need to work harder and harder to bring value to their development process in order to build high quality applications and remain competitive. Developers can accomplish this by improving their productivity, quickly solving problems, and writing better code.

A wealth of open source and free software tools are available for developers who want to improve the way they create, build, deploy, and use software. Tools, components, and frameworks exist to help developers at every point in the development process. Windows Developer Power Tools offers an encyclopedic guide to more than 170 of these free tools to help developers build top-notch Windows software from desktop applications to web services.

To help you choose the right tools for solving both common and uncommon problems you face each day, this book follows a unique task-oriented organization, laying out topics in the same order that you and your team are likely to encounter them as you work on a project. Each tool entry features a solid introduction — a mini user’s guide — so you can get up to speed quickly and understand how to best use the tool in your environment. Inside, you’ll find: A guide to more than 170 tools covering 24 unique aspects of Windows and .NET software development, with many descriptions contributed by the tools’ authors Descriptions of freely available ASP.NET and Windows Forms controls, object relational mapping systems, testing frameworks, and build and continuous integration tools Articles on tools to help developers troubleshoot misbehaving applications Guides for utilities to boost productivity in the development environment as well as speeding up tasks in Windows itself “Quickpick” lists at the start of each chapter to help you find and choose the right tool for your task “At a Glance” and “In a Nutshell” summaries to help readers more quickly narrow their options References to an online book site to keep you up-to-date with new releases and features Forewords by Mike Gunderloy (Larkware) and Scott Hanselman (http: //www.hanselman.com/tools), operators of the two most popular tools sites for Microsoft developers.

Also, plenty of links in each article point you to additional detail online if you wish to delve more deeply into features and functionality. This one-stop resource covers a wide range of open source and freeware tools to help you answer questions around planning, developing, testing, and rolling out great software. Best of all, they’re free.

Windows Developer Power Tools: Turbocharge Windows Development with More Than 140 Free and Open Source Tools

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Comments

5 Responses to “Windows Developer Power Tools: Turbocharge Windows Development with More Than 140 Free and Open Source Tools”

  1. Jose C. Danino on November 21st, 2009 1:59 pm

    DISCLAIMER: I personally know both authors.

    The book presents an exensive list of tools available to the .NET programmer. I agree with one of the reviewer that indicates that as soon as the book is published it is out of date; hence, some of the tools may be significantly changed or replaced by better tools. However, this problem is not unique to this book but applies to any book, particularly in technology. In spite of this obsolescence, the book provides a summary for what each tool can do and provides a starting point to do research on a tool that will help the reader perform their job more eficiently.

    I highly recommend this book because it is very comprehensive. In addition it has a number of Windows tools that are also very helpful in tasks that every developer has to do but are not related to writing code.
    Rating: 5 / 5

  2. Daniel McKinnon on November 21st, 2009 2:29 pm

    ‘Windows Developer Power Tools: Turbocharge Windows development with more than 170 free and open source tools’ is one of the most cost-efficient books I have ever read in my life. As the title says, this book is jam-packed with some of the most helpful and needy tools that you can ever find for Windows all put into one huge TOME of a book (1250+ pages).

    Spread over 23 chapters, content is broken up into topics like Windows Form, creating documentation, testing, bug tracking, XML, etc. etc. etc. etc. etc. There is so much here is would take quite a while to read but that’s not a bad thing in this case. If you are an administrator, developer, or just anyone that wants to learn to use Windows more efficiently, you NEED to pick this book up today.

    Love it Love it Love it Love it Love it!!!!!

    ***** HIGHEST POSSIBLE RECOMMENDATION
    Rating: 5 / 5

  3. Brian Peek on November 21st, 2009 3:18 pm

    Clocking in at close to 1300 pages, this book is an excellent resource for almost every Windows developer scenario you can think of. It’s certainly not a book you’re going to read cover-to-cover, but the next time you’re implementing a project of type X (SQL, unit testing, performance monitoring, etc. etc. etc.) you’ll want to look it up in this book to see what tools are available to aid you in your development goal.

    One of the things I found wonderful about this book is that not only does it list the tool, where it’s available, and basic stats, but it also goes in depth on how to use the tool to fit the need with sample source code, screen shots, and real-world examples.

    Great stuff. It should be on every Windows developer’s bookshelf.
    Rating: 5 / 5

  4. Midwest Book Review on November 21st, 2009 4:59 pm

    Over a hundred free and open source programming tools and frameworks are packed into James Avery & Jim Holmes’s Windows Developer Power Tools, a reference perfect for programmers and documentors, including tools for over twenty common Windows and .NET software tasks and lists which pair the right tool with the right job. This is not a pick for amateurs, but for seasoned developers who have some background already but need a more definitive reference to selecting and using tools.
    Rating: 5 / 5

  5. Brian H. Madsen on November 21st, 2009 5:45 pm

    Windows Developer Power Tools: Turbocharge Windows development with more than 140 free and open source tools (Power Tools)

    Overview

    Open-source and free developer/performance tools can be found in abundance on the internet today but one of the few issues that generally comes up after you’ve gotten hold of one is “how does this work?”.

    On occasion you’ll start to use a tool or add-in only to find out later on that there’s a much better way to utilise the power you suddenly have at your hands – but by then, you’ve spent hours already “mis-using” the tool.

    This book arms you with information, tips and tricks, how-tos and descriptions on a host of known, and possibly unknown, tools that will seriously help you speed up your development – so why not be the hero of the office and start developing smartly!

    Over the last couple of years i’ve been in and out of windows and web development and felt that i was comfortable in both arenas. But after reading this book I knew that I could have been a much more efficient developer if only I’d known about the tools it explores.

    The book is divided into suitable chapters, making it very easy to use the book for fast reference if you suddenly remember that you once read (somewhere?) about a tool doing exactly what you’re trying to achieve in the old fashioned way – doing it yourself from scratch.

    Each chapter (or tool/tip/add-in) is presented in an easily to understand english, with a logical order that makes reading this book a pleasure. Some books comes across with technical jargon without explanations for the varied levels of developers out there, but this book can easily be enjoyed by both the experienced developer and the starting rising star.

    Some of my most favorite tools are included in this book, such as Anthem.Net, which encapsulates web forms and extends AJAX capability without having to write a single line of JavaScript.

    Other tools which was new to me, included CopySourceAsHTML, and the experience with which i’ve had with posting code over the years, or including snippets in documentation, has just been greatly improved.

    Conclusion

    What i found most pleasing about this book, is the consistency in which it presents each topic for you. The authors has gone to great length to make it a flawless experience in reading this book and even though many has contributed to the content, the layout is flawlessly simple.

    A very easy read and a bookshelf essential! Five stars…

    Rating: 5 / 5

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