Head First books are usually very good books. I'd recommend starting with those books first.
On Thu, Jul 17, 2008 at 7:27 AM, John Warner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Head First C# > Head First Object Oriented Design (or something like that, use Amazon) > > The first will take you through C# and the second is written for Java > Developers but is a great way to pick up OOP. IMO no particular order to > which you read first. > > John Warner > > > > > > -----Original Message----- > > From: Discussion of advanced .NET topics. > > [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Ben Joyce > > Sent: Thursday, July 17, 2008 8:57 AM > > To: ADVANCED-DOTNET@DISCUSS.DEVELOP.COM > > Subject: [ADVANCED-DOTNET] C#, OOP, and ASP.NET > > > > > > hey guys, can anyone recommend a good book for learning C# > > OOP with view to use in ASP.NET? Failing that, a good C# OOP > > book would do. I have a few years ASP.NET experience but > > it's in VB and I'd like to move to C# and start using OOP > > properly - however, I've no formal OOP training either > > academically or professionally and want to know the right way > > to build OOP-based apps. > > > > Any help appreciated. > > > > Ben > > > > -- > > http://www.flickr.com/photos/benbenbenbenben > > > > =================================== > > This list is hosted by DevelopMentorR http://www.develop.com > > > > View archives and manage your subscription(s) at > > http://discuss.develop.com > > > > =================================== > This list is hosted by DevelopMentor(R) http://www.develop.com > > View archives and manage your subscription(s) at > http://discuss.develop.com > =================================== This list is hosted by DevelopMentorĀ® http://www.develop.com View archives and manage your subscription(s) at http://discuss.develop.com