C Sharp Programming. Wikibooks
ΠΠ°ΡΠ΅Π³ΠΎΡΠΈΡ: C#
ΠΠΎΠ΄Π΅Π»ΠΈΡΡΡΡ:
C Sharp Programming is a featured book on Wikibooks because it contains substantial content, it is well-formatted, and the Wikibooks community has decided to feature it on the main page or in other places. Please continue to improve it and thanks for the great work so far!You can edit its advertisement template. C# (pronounced "See Sharp") is a multi-purpose computer programming language suitable for a wide variety of development needs. This Wikibook introduces C# language fundamentals and covers a variety of the base class libraries (BCL) provided by the Microsoft .NET Framework.Although C# is derived from the C programming language, it introduces some unique and powerful features, such as delegates (which can be viewed as type-safe function pointers) and lambda expressions which introduce elements of functional programming languages, as well as a simpler single class inheritance model (than C++) and, for those of you with experience in "C-like" languages, a very familiar syntax that may help beginners become proficient faster than its predecessors.Similar to Java, it is object-oriented, comes with an extensive class library, and supports exception handling, multiple types of polymorphism, and separation of interfaces from implementations.Those features, combined with its powerful development tools, multi-platform support, and generics, make C# a good choice for many types of software development projects: rapid application development projects, projects implemented by individuals or large or small teams, Internet applications, and projects with strict reliability requirements. Testing frameworks such as NUnit make C# amenable to test-driven development and thus a good language for use with Extreme Programming (XP).Its strong typing helps to prevent many programming errors that are common in weakly typed languages.
Π‘ΠΊΠ°ΡΠ°ΡΡ
ΠΠΎΠΌΠΌΠ΅Π½ΡΠ°ΡΠΈΠΈ