.NET Framework Advanced Development
.NET Framework 4
This section of the documentation covers advanced programming subjects related to the .NET Framework.
This section of the documentation covers advanced programming subjects related to the .NET Framework.
Describes how to develop add-in applications that extend a host application's functionality.
Describes how to manage objects in the Active Directory, and how to use Windows Management Instrumentation (WMI) to obtain enterprise data and automate administrative tasks.
Describes two design patterns available in the .NET Framework that are used to run threads separately from the main application thread.
Describes how you can store data in memory for rapid access to improve the performance and scalability of your .NET Framework applications.
Describes the recommended design pattern for cleaning up unmanaged resources.
Discusses the advantages and architecture of the dynamic language runtime (DLR), which is a runtime environment that enables dynamic languages to run on the .NET Framework.
Discusses the Code Document Object Model (CodeDOM), which enables the output of source code in multiple programming languages.
Describes a set of managed types in the System.Reflection.Emit namespace that enable a compiler or tool to emit metadata and Microsoft intermediate language (MSIL) at run time and optionally generate a portable executable (PE) file on disk.
Discusses how the garbage collector manages memory and how you can program to use memory more efficiently.
Describes services provided by the .NET Framework for interaction with COM components, COM+ services, external type libraries, and many operating system services.
Explains how to use the Lazy<T> class to initialize objects at the time they are first accessed.
Describes the concepts and syntax of the Managed Extensibility Framework (MEF), which lets you easily add extensibility to applications.
Provides information about manipulations and inertia processing. Manipulations let users move, rotate, and resize components by using a mouse device, a stylus, or their fingers. Inertia simulates friction forces for UI elements that are in motion, and causes them to gradually slow their movements. Manipulations and inertia processing can be used in UI frameworks such as WPF and XNA.
Discusses establishing communication between objects that run in different processes.
Shows how to use Internet access classes to implement both Web- and Internet-based applications.
Discusses how Visual Studio and the .NET Framework support parallel programming with a new runtime, new class library types, and diagnostic tools.
Explains how to obtain access to type information at run time by using reflection.
Discusses writing reliable code for any host that is executing in a .NET Framework environment.
Discusses the process of converting the state of an object into a form that can be persisted or transported.
Explains the runtime support for threading and how to program by using various synchronization techniques.
Discusses System.XAML, which is an assembly that implements XAML services for the .NET Framework.
Describes how Microsoft supports building XML Web services using technologies such as ASP.NET, ATL Server, .NET remoting, and the SOAP Toolkit 2.0.
Supplies syntax, code examples, and related information for each class that is contained in the .NET Framework namespaces.
Explains common programming tasks that apply to a range of .NET Framework applications. Includes topics such as accessing data, file and stream I/O, configuration, encoding, deployment, and debugging.
Provides links to the MSDN Code Gallery for sample applications that demonstrate .NET Framework technologies.
Describes the tools that help you develop, configure, and deploy applications by using .NET Framework technologies.