Visual Basic and Visual Basic .NET for Scientists and Engineers

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Visual Basic and Visual Basic .NET for Scientists and Engineers begins with an overview of the Visual Basic and Visual Basic .NET IDEs, their important characteristics, and how the development environments can be manipulated to suit developers' needs. After a solid discussion of VB and VB .NET forms, controls, and namespaces, author Christopher Frenz shows you how to put controls to work by making use of the different control events.

Once this introductory material has been covered, you're introduced to the different data types that Visual Basic supports, with special attention paid to the various numerical data types and their uses. Frenz then takes an in-depth look at the various numerical and logical operators and their precedence. You'll explore VB's loop structures via practical examples.

Frenz later delves into topics such as designing graphical user interfaces, programming customized spreadsheets, and debugging. Along the way, you'll learn about the all-important file handling and data acquisition techniques, as well as how to graphically display your data. You'll also move on to cover more advanced topics, including mathematical modeling and the new, rapidly growing field of bioinformatics.

Author(s): Christopher Frenz (auth.)
Edition: 1
Publisher: Apress
Year: 2002

Language: English
Pages: 335
Tags: Software Engineering/Programming and Operating Systems

Front Matter....Pages i-xvi
Overview of Visual Basic Programming and the Visual Basic Development Environment....Pages 1-20
Working with WinForms....Pages 21-37
Controls and Their Uses....Pages 39-71
Variables, Data Types, and Operators....Pages 73-94
Arrays and Loop Structures....Pages 95-124
Built-in Functions....Pages 125-155
Writing Your Own Functions and Procedures....Pages 157-173
Getting Data from External Sources....Pages 175-197
Programming Your Own Spreadsheets....Pages 199-219
Scientific Graphics....Pages 221-240
Debugging and Error Handling....Pages 241-258
Packaging and Deploying Your Application....Pages 259-269
Mathematical Modeling....Pages 271-284
Bioinformatics....Pages 285-304
Web-Based Applications....Pages 305-320
Back Matter....Pages 321-342