Download or read book Beginning MFC Programming written by Ivor Horton and published by . This book was released on 1997 with total page 648 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: The MFC is a collection of C++ classes that programmers can reuse to create the main body of their code that all Windows applications have in common. This is the perfect tutorial to Windows programming with MFC and develops a complete and realistic example application in MFC.
Download or read book Introduction to MFC Programming with Visual C written by Richard M. Jones and published by Prentice Hall. This book was released on 2000 with total page 312 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: 1662J-5 Not just a "run-the-wizard, push-the-buttons" guide -- real MFC mastery! Starts from ground zero: no object-oriented expertise required! An important but simple example illustrations how MFC invokes your virtual functions. Introduces MFC Document/View Architecture, program structure, and much more. Includes more than 90 short programs illustrating collection classes, mouse and keyboard techniques, common controls, menus, and more. Covers bitmap graphics and database access. Simply the most effective, thorough introduction to MFC you can find! If you really want to master MFC, there are no shortcuts, but there is one great book: Introduction to MFC Programming with Visual C++. Unlike many MFC books, this one doesn't start with Microsoft's AppWizard. Rather, it begins by giving you an in-depth grounding in the structure of MFC programs: an understanding that will serve you well in every program you write. Author Richard Jones also introduces the fundamentals of object-oriented programming with MFC and Visual C++, the essential concepts underlying MFC, the Document/View architecture, and much more. Once you understand how MFC really works, Jones helps you accomplish more than you ever imagined. You'll not only master MFC's common interface controls, but also database access, and much more. Introduction to MFC Programming with Visual C++ contains dozens of diagrams and programs-from to-the-point snippets to sizable programs designed to demonstrate powerful software engineering techniques. About the CD-ROM This title originally included a CDROM that contained all of the sample programs. This CDROM is no longer available, nor are the sample programs.
Download or read book MFC Programming from the Ground Up written by Herbert Schildt and published by McGraw-Hill Companies. This book was released on 1998 with total page 698 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: A clear, comprehensive, well-paced description of all MFC essentials with numerous, ready-to-run examples, tips, and suggestions for those programmers transitioning from API for Windows programming. Includes in-depth boxes covering specific MFC programming topics and margin notes that provide concise information of critical terms without interrupting the text flow.
Download or read book Beginning MFC COM Programming written by Julian Templeman and published by . This book was released on 1997 with total page 518 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Programmers are in a dilemma--they must learn COM to stay abreast of the developments in Windows, but it's hard to understand and use them. This book is dedicated to teaching MFC programmers what COM is and how to use it. It follows the proven learn-by-doing format, and in the course of the book the reader develops a complete application from both OLE servers and components.
Download or read book Visual C MFC Programming by Example written by John E. Swanke and published by CRC Press. This book was released on 1999-01-01 with total page 593 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: -- Add extensions to the Developer's Studio Wizards -- 85 examples with complete working code Tired of the inadequate examples and documentation for MFC and Visual C++ development? Don't like what the Developer Studio Wizards give you? Beginning and exper
Download or read book Teach Yourself MFC Library Programming in 21 Days written by Robert Shaw and published by Prentice Hall. This book was released on 1994 with total page 660 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Beginning with the basic aspects of the MFC classes, Robert Shaw then jumps into the more advanced usage and operation of the classes. Each of the chapters includes real-world programming examples that demonstrate the simple and advanced aspects of the selected MFC classes. Disk includes all source code from the book for both Visual C++ and Zortech C++.
Download or read book Beginning C Programming written by Richard Grimes and published by Packt Publishing Ltd. This book was released on 2017-04-24 with total page 516 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Modern C++ at your fingertips! About This Book This book gets you started with the exciting world of C++ programming It will enable you to write C++ code that uses the standard library, has a level of object orientation, and uses memory in a safe and effective way It forms the basis of programming and covers concepts such as data structures and the core programming language Who This Book Is For A computer, an internet connection, and the desire to learn how to code in C++ is all you need to get started with this book. What You Will Learn Get familiar with the structure of C++ projects Identify the main structures in the language: functions and classes Feel confident about being able to identify the execution flow through the code Be aware of the facilities of the standard library Gain insights into the basic concepts of object orientation Know how to debug your programs Get acquainted with the standard C++ library In Detail C++ has come a long way and is now adopted in several contexts. Its key strengths are its software infrastructure and resource-constrained applications, including desktop applications, servers, and performance-critical applications, not to forget its importance in game programming. Despite its strengths in these areas, beginners usually tend to shy away from learning the language because of its steep learning curve. The main mission of this book is to make you familiar and comfortable with C++. You will finish the book not only being able to write your own code, but more importantly, you will be able to read other projects. It is only by being able to read others' code that you will progress from a beginner to an advanced programmer. This book is the first step in that progression. The first task is to familiarize you with the structure of C++ projects so you will know how to start reading a project. Next, you will be able to identify the main structures in the language, functions, and classes, and feel confident being able to identify the execution flow through the code. You will then become aware of the facilities of the standard library and be able to determine whether you need to write a routine yourself, or use an existing routine in the standard library. Throughout the book, there is a big emphasis on memory and pointers. You will understand memory usage, allocation, and access, and be able to write code that does not leak memory. Finally, you will learn about C++ classes and get an introduction to object orientation and polymorphism. Style and approach This straightforward tutorial will help you build strong skills in C++ programming, be it for enterprise software or for low-latency applications such as games or embedded programming. Filled with examples, this book will take you gradually up the steep learning curve of C++.
Download or read book MFC Programming written by Alan R. Feuer and published by Addison-Wesley Professional. This book was released on 1997 with total page 488 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: "MFC Programming" covers all the basic aspects of a Windows program, including menus, windows, dialogs and controls, the mouse and graphics, the keyboard, and text. It also details MFC's application framework covering documents and various types of views.
Download or read book Beginning ATL 3 COM Programming written by Richard Grimes and published by . This book was released on 1999 with total page 0 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This guide is a practical manual for COM, with the core architecture of ATL clarified and illuminated with code. Text also develops a full control that can be extended or used directly.
Download or read book Extending MFC Applications with the NET Framework written by Tom Archer and published by Addison-Wesley Professional. This book was released on 2003 with total page 660 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: -Filled with practical examples that show how to incorporate .NET functionality into legacy applications in order to make them more productive-Demonstrates clearly how various .NET classes provide either a new ability not found in MFC, or a markedly improved way of doing something-Explains how developers can start to use .NET today without abandoning their current skill set
Download or read book Professional MFC with Visual C 6 written by Mike Blaszczak and published by . This book was released on 1998-12 with total page 0 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: " The job of the MFC team is to give the C + + Windows developer the most comprehensive assistance possible for developing working code, and I believe that commitment extends to the contents of h is eve book. I work for Microsoft, but that wont prevent me from exposing both the strengths and weakness of our framework. In these pages, I'm going to describe the majority of the Microsoft Foundation Classes. On the way, I want to focus your attention on the utility the classes provide and the way they work together. I'm not going to spend time reproducing the help files by detailing every parameter for every member function. My aim is to help you to discover the great features of Visual C + + 6 for yourself, and then I'll show you how to make the best applications, utilities and embedded objects in town, using MFC. " Mike Blaszczak. Who is this book for ? This book is for professional developers with a desire to get under the covers of the Microsoft Foundation Classes to find out why Microsoft implemented things the way they did. A good grasp of C + + and some Windows programming knowledge are assumed. Professional MFC with Visual C + + 6 is a revised version of Professional MFC with Visual C + + 5. It covers Visual C ++ 6 and MIFC 6, including the new features and updates of these latest versions. Microsoft Visual Studio and the Wizards The document/view architecture of MIFC. How to tweak your applications to perfection MFC improved support for the Windows common controls. How to write safe, secure, multithreaded applications. Compound document servers and containers. ActiveX controls and control containers. Using MFC to implement Internet client and server functionality. Integration of ATL with MFC. Details of the new MFC support for DHTML.
Download or read book VC MFC Extensions by Example written by John Swanke and published by CRC Press. This book was released on 1999-01-10 with total page 663 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Extend and modify MFC code to meet your needs! Author John Swanke delivers studied examples to give you a jump-start on creating more sophisticated and powerful applications. Each example is fully annotated and ready to insert into the your application --
Download or read book Ivor Horton s Beginning Visual C 2012 written by Ivor Horton and published by John Wiley & Sons. This book was released on 2012-09-13 with total page 40 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: The only book to teach C++ programming with Microsoft Visual Studio! There's a reason why Ivor Horton's Beginning Visual C++ books dominate the marketplace. Ivor Horton has a loyal following who love his winning approach to teaching programming languages, and in this fully updated new edition, he repeats his successful formula. Offering a comprehensive introduction to both the standard C++ language and to Visual C++, he offers step-by-step programming exercises, examples, and solutions to deftly guide novice programmers through the ins and outs of C++ development. Introduces novice programmers to the current standard, Microsoft Visual C++ 2012, as it is implemented in Microsoft Visual Studio 2012 Focuses on teaching both the C++11 standard and Visual C++ 2012, unlike virtually any other book on the market Covers the C++ language and library and the IDE Delves into new features of both the C++11 standard and of the Visual C++ 2012 programming environment Features C++ project templates, code snippets, and more Even if you have no previous programming experience, you'll soon learn how to build real-world applications using Visual C++ 2012 with this popular guide.
Download or read book Programming with MFC and Visual C written by Nicholas L Pappas, PH D and published by Createspace Independent Publishing Platform. This book was released on 2017-09-04 with total page 0 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Computer Science Design Series Programming with MFC & Visual C++ Prerequisite: Microsoft Visual C++ 6.0 or equivalent. Recommended especially if you are new to MFC: Jeff Prosise "Programming Windows with MFC" (1337 pages, ISBN 1572 316 950) This text is about how to use Windows Microsoft Foundation Classes (the MFC) and the software program Visual C++ to write programs using windows without knowing how to write the complex code that produces the windows. The MFC/Visual C++ combination immensely simplifies the writing of any program that uses one or more windows. Second, this is about learning how program with MFC from the bottom up so that you can produce the projects presented here. Many MFC classes and functions replace/obsolete many C, C++, and C# classes and functions. Consequently you can go directly to MFC, and save a lot of time and energy. Programming with MFC allows you to work at the top of the C hierarchy, while avoiding the limitations of C, C++, and C#. This text BEGINS to show you how to program with MFC by using Visual C++ to produce skeleton programs on the Visual C++ screen. Skeletons that include code producing the windows in which your programs will be presented. For example, creating front panels using dialog boxes in which you place controls (push button, combo box, slider, text box, etc.) in precise positions and how to initialize/program the controls. We say begin, because learning how to program in any language is an endless task. Especially MFC with its hundreds of functions. At this point we believe it is very important that you view the table of contents to know what we have chosen to present from the thousands of possibilities. We believe our choices represent the basic know-how one needs to get going with MFC. There is an unavoidable "cook book" element to using Visual C++ that dictates how to create the skeletons, and where to enter code in the skeletons. This text is different. Instead of referring you to code on a disk (with few if any comments), and instead of offering partial explanations in the text, requiring you have to go back and forth from book to disk, and wondering what to do next, we show you how code is written that actually creates programs that run on any computer using the windows operating system. That is why only the Visual C++ disk is required. We briefly explain most of the code lines used to produce the functions required by the projects. We expect the reader to have a basic programming capability. This text uses the Jeff Prosise text "Programming Windows with MFC", as a very useful reference.With Jeff Prosise's text supporting us we were able to write programs using windows, while knowing nothing about windows programming and very little about MFC and the various C languages. JP's text gave us a great start with the design process producing programs presented in one or more windows. That experience brings us to this point. We wrote this text, because even with the JP reference we learned that we had to answer many "How-do-we-do-that?" questions. Answers we needed in order to produce programs that run. Answers we share with you by presenting selected topics in the form of working projects. Many types of programs can be implemented with MFC. We focus on dot exe (name.exe) executing programs. JP's text makes very clear the fact that there is much, much more to MFC then what is presented here.
Download or read book Windows MFC Programming I written by Vic Broquard and published by . This book was released on 2014-08-31 with total page 594 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Windows MFC Programming I begins with the very fundamentals and, in a step by step, gradient manner, develops most all of the basic Windows programming techniques. There are often many different ways to accomplish the same task. So as you move from example to example, expect to see alternative approaches illustrated. Windows MFC Programming I is not a reference manual; rather, expect to see the "whys" and "how comes" that lie behind many of the approaches and techniques. It is my opinion that if you have a feel for what is really going on, you can do a better job of programming and debugging. The first three chapters present Windows C API (the programming interface); they are designed to get you used to programming in a message-driven style which is completely different from the normal DOS C++ style of programming. In chapter 4, the MFC OOP encapsulation of the Windows API is presented illustrating how the beginning features from the first three chapters are encapsulated. Through the next series of chapters, the GUI is introduced a step at a time, such as timers, colors, resource files, menu operations, icons, cursors, dialog operations, the use of global memory, the new file handling functions, image processing, for example. Tool bars and the status bar are presented next followed by the multiple document interface and clipboard operations. Sound and animation effects continue to explore the possibilities of this rich platform. The final chapter discusses the document-view architecture which many professional applications utilize. This is an extensive topic and is one of the longest chapters in the book. Along the way, you are introduced to the Resource Editor, the Class Wizard, and finally the AppWizard. Each is introduced at that point where you can best utilize it to your advantage and know what you are actually doing with it. Windows MFC Programming I has many complete C++ programming examples. While some of the early ones are fairly simple, the latter ones represent fairly complete applications. The benefit of these extended samples is great; you gain an understanding of how the various messages all operate together. All of these sample programs accompany the book. There are a number of very important application design issues that are written this way. Design Rule 1: They highlight some of the potential traps and pitfalls that lie in waiting. Perhaps the biggest barrier to learning Windows programming is the enormous number of identifiers, key values, the API (Application Programming Interface) and the MFC (Microsoft Foundation Classes) class member functions and variable names. For a beginner and more advanced reader, this proliferation of must-know names and identifiers is nothing short of bewildering. One of the key features of this book is that you will always have a greater certainty about what names must be coded as-is and what you have control over. Typeface conventions are designed to aid you in knowing at a glance what names are yours and what are not. Even though you may use any convention desired in your coding, when you refer to this book, the guess work or hunting has been eliminated. While I hope that the index at the end allows you to rapidly find key items, as a programmer, I know the value of being able to find a key identifier or function in the actual samples themselves. The all-in-one large pdf file is fully searchable. I have reworked my out-of-print Intermediate MFC text, which covers the intermediate MFC programming aspects. The sequel book, Windows MFC Programming II continues where this one leaves off and covers newer MFC classes and many advanced topics not found anywhere else!
Download or read book Windows Programming Under the Hood of MFC written by Laura B. Draxler and published by Prentice Hall. This book was released on 1998 with total page 644 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: "If you have previous development experience on other platforms, you may have been overwhelmed by the hidden features of the MFC when you came to work in Windows. Windows Programming Under the Hood of MFC gives you the lowdown on core components of the Windows programming model." "As you work through the text, you'll learn how each new concept relates to MFC and its hierarchical structure. Then you'll be ready to shift into high gear, using your existing C and C++ skills to create dynamic applications for the Win32 architecture with Microsoft Visual C++ 5." "Icons throughout the text help you quickly identify the topics under discussion. Each chapter also includes tutorials for self-guided learning." "Aimed at developers, Windows Programming Under the Hood of MFC assumes a knowledge of C++ data structures. You should also have experience with some graphical windowing environment, and at least a passing familiarity with Windows 95 or Windows NT." "Included is a diskette, containing full-featured programs, progressively built-upon throughout the book, which are used to illustrate the MFC and Win32 concepts discussed."--BOOK JACKET.Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Inc. All Rights Reserved
Download or read book A First Book of Visual C written by Gary J. Bronson and published by Course Technology. This book was released on 2000 with total page 1016 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: "Gary Bronson's introduction to C++ programming text teaches you how to use development tools provided in the Microsoft Visual C++ graphical programming environment. You will learn to design and build C++ programs using graphical development tools in addition to standard coding techniques. The book's four parts deal with procedural programming, data structures, object-oriented programming, and event-based programming using Microsoft Foundation Classes (MFCs)."--BOOK JACKET.