CLR via C# 第4版 英文PDFKristin, words cannot express how /feel about our life together.
cherish our family and all our adventures. I'm filled each day with
love for
Aidan (age 9)and Grant (age 5), you both have been an inspira-
tion to me and have taught me to play and have fun Watching
the two of you grow up has been so rewarding and enjoyable for
me. am lucky to be able to partake in your lives. love and ap
preciate you more than you could ever know
Contents at a glance
Introduction
PART I
CLR BASICS
CHAPTER 1
The clr's execution model
CHAPTER 2 Building, Packaging, Deploying, and
Administering Applications and Types
33
chaPTeR 3
Shared Assemblies and Strongly Named Assemblies
65
PART I
DESIGNING TYPES
CHAPTER 4 Type Fundamentals
91
CHAPTER 5 Primitive, Reference, and Value Types
111
CHAPTER 6 Type and Member Basics
151
CHAPTER 7
Constants and fields
175
chaPTer 8
Methods
181
chaPTer 9
Parameters
209
CHAPTER 10 Properties
227
CHAPTER 11 Events
249
CHAPTER 12 Generics
265
CHAPTER 13 Interfaces
295
PARTⅢ
ESSENTIAL TYPES
CHAPTER 14 Chars, Strings, and Working with Text
317
CHAPTER 15 Enumerated Types and Bit Flags
361
CHAPTER 16
Arrays
373
CHAPTER 17 Delegates
391
CHAPTER 18 Custom Attributes
421
CHAPTER 19
Nullable value Types
441
PART IV
CORE FACILITIES
CHAPTER 20 Exceptions and state management
451
CHAPTER 21 The Managed Heap and Garbage Collection
505
CHAPTER 22 CLR Hosting and AppDomains
553
CHAPTER 23 Assembly Loading and reflection
583
CHAPTER 24 Runtime serialization
611
CHAPTER 25 Interoperating with WinRT Components
643
PAR V
THREADING
ChaPTEr 26 Thread basics
669
CHAPTER 27 Compute-Bound Asynchronous Operations
691
CHAPTER 28 IyO-Bound Asynchronous Operations
727
CHAPTER 29 Primitive thread Synchronization Constructs
757
CHAPTER 30 Hybrid Thread Synchronization Constructs
789
Index
823
Contents at a glance
Contents
Introduction
XX
PART
CLR BASICS
Chapter 1 The Clrs Execution Model
3
Compiling Source Code into Managed Modules
Combining managed modules into assemblies
Loading the Common Language Runtime
8
Executing Your Assembly's Code
11
IL and∨ erification
16
Unsafe Code
The Native Code generator tool: ngen. exe
19
The Framework Class Library
22
The Common Type System
The Common Language Specification
Interoperability with Unmanaged Code
30
Chapter 2 Building, Packaging, Deploying, and
Administering Applications and Types
33
NET Framework Deployment Goals
34
Building Types into a Module
35
Response Fil
36
A Brief Look at metadata
38
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Combining Modules to Form an Assembly
45
Adding Assemblies to a Project by Using the Visual Studio IDE.51
Using the assembly Linker
Adding Resource Files to an Assembly
53
Assembly Version Resource Information
.54
Version numbers
..58
Culture
Simple Application Deployment(Privately deployed Assemblies)...60
Simple Administrative Control(Configuration)
62
Chapter 3 Shared Assemblies and Strongly Named Assemblies 65
Two Kinds of Assemblies, Two Kinds of Deployment
66
Giving an Assembly a Strong Name
67
The global Assembly Cache
72
Building an Assembly That References a Strongly Named Assembly..74
Strongly named assemblies are tamper-Resistant
75
Delayed Signing
Privately Deploying Strongly Named Assemblies
How the Runtime Resolves Type References
80
Advanced Administrative Control( Configuration)
83
Publisher Policy control
86
PART I
DESIGNING TYPES
Chapter 4 Type Fundamentals
91
All Types Are Derived from System Object
.91
Casting Between Types
93
Casting with the C# is and as Operators
Namespaces and assemblies
97
How Things relate at Run time
.101
Chapter 5 Primitive, Reference, and Value Types
111
Programming Language Primitive Types
111
Checked and Unchecked Primitive Type Operations
115
Reference Types and value Types
118
Boxing and Unboxing Value Types
124
Changing Fields in a Boxed Value Type by Using Interfaces
and Why You Shouldnt Do This)
136
Object Equality and Identity
139
Object hash Codes
.142
The dynamic Primitive Type
......144
Chapter 6 Type and member Basics
151
The Different Kinds of Type Members
.151
Type visibilit
154
Friend assemblies
154
Member accessibility
.156
Static Classes
...158
Partial Classes, Structures, and Interfaces
.159
Components, Polymorphism, and Versioning
160
How the CLR Calls Virtual Methods, Properties, and Events
162
Using Type Visibility and Member Accessibility Intelligently...166
Dealing with Virtual Methods When Versioning Types
16
Chapter 7 Constants and Fields
175
Constants
175
Fⅰe|ds
...177
Chapter 8 Methods
181
Instance Constructors and Classes(Reference Types)
181
Instance Constructors and Structures(Value Types)
184
Type Constructors
187
Contents x
Operator Overload Methods
191
Operators and Programming Language Interoperability
193
Conversion Operator Methods
195
Extension method
198
Rules and guidelines
....,200
Extending Various Types with Extension Methods
201
The Extension Attribute
203
Partial Methods
204
Rules and guidelines
207
Chapter 9 Parameters
209
Optional and Named Parameters
209
Rules and guidelines
210
The defaultParameter value and optional Attributes
212
Implicitly Typed Local Variabl
212
Passing parameters by reference to a Method
214
Passing a variable Number of arguments to a Method
220
Parameter and Return Type Guidelines
223
Const-nes
224
Chapter 10 Properties
227
Parameterless Properties
227
Automatically Implemented Properties
231
Defining Properties Intelligently
232
Object and collection Initializers
235
Anonymous Type
.237
The System. Tuple type
240
Parameterful Properties
242
The performance of calling property accessor Methods
247
Property Accessor Accessibility
248
Generic prop
A
roperty Access
248
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