What's Out There?

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  • Tim Roberts

    What's Out There?

    As I'm getting started up with C#, I understand that much of the beauty is
    the huge set of classes in the CLR. The same thing is true of my current
    favorite language, Python; the beauty is the richness of the standard
    library, allowing me to craft useful programs in just a few lines.

    With Python, I can find out what's available to me by browsing through the
    ..py files in the standard library directory. That's something I seem to be
    missing with C#: I can't get a grasp on what tools are at my disposal.

    Can you suggest a good resource that collects the CLR classes in a useful
    and easy-to-browse reference form? MSDN has good drill-down information,
    but it doesn't seem to be the right choice for browsing. It just takes too
    long to move from place to place for each tidbit of info.
    --
    Tim Roberts, timr@probo.com
    Providenza & Boekelheide, Inc.
  • Peter Duniho

    #2
    Re: What's Out There?

    On Wed, 12 Nov 2008 23:12:42 -0800, Tim Roberts <timr@probo.com wrote:
    [...]
    Can you suggest a good resource that collects the CLR classes in a useful
    and easy-to-browse reference form? MSDN has good drill-down information,
    but it doesn't seem to be the right choice for browsing. It just takes
    too
    long to move from place to place for each tidbit of info.
    You might check out Reflector
    (http://www.red-gate.com/products/reflector/). It displays detailed
    information straight from the actual .NET assemblies.

    As for MSDN, you're right...that's one slow web site. You might try using
    Google's new-ish browser, Chrome. I don't have first-hand experience with
    it, but I've heard that they focused on optimizing Javascript performance,
    and so it's possible that the MSDN experience would be more acceptable
    using that browser.

    That said, a lot of the time a Google or MSDN search based on a simple
    description of your actual _task_ will quickly point you in the right
    direction, without having to browse a bunch of irrelevant classes just to
    find the one you're actually interested in.

    Pete

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    • Tim Sprout

      #3
      Re: What's Out There?

      Tim Roberts wrote:
      As I'm getting started up with C#, I understand that much of the beauty is
      the huge set of classes in the CLR. The same thing is true of my current
      favorite language, Python; the beauty is the richness of the standard
      library, allowing me to craft useful programs in just a few lines.
      >
      With Python, I can find out what's available to me by browsing through the
      .py files in the standard library directory. That's something I seem to be
      missing with C#: I can't get a grasp on what tools are at my disposal.
      >
      Can you suggest a good resource that collects the CLR classes in a useful
      and easy-to-browse reference form? MSDN has good drill-down information,
      but it doesn't seem to be the right choice for browsing. It just takes too
      long to move from place to place for each tidbit of info.
      Hi Tim Roberts...I enjoy your posts over at comp.lang.asm.x 86

      --Tim Sprout

      Comment

      • =?ISO-8859-1?Q?Arne_Vajh=F8j?=

        #4
        Re: What's Out There?

        Tim Roberts wrote:
        As I'm getting started up with C#, I understand that much of the beauty is
        the huge set of classes in the CLR. The same thing is true of my current
        favorite language, Python; the beauty is the richness of the standard
        library, allowing me to craft useful programs in just a few lines.
        >
        With Python, I can find out what's available to me by browsing through the
        .py files in the standard library directory. That's something I seem to be
        missing with C#: I can't get a grasp on what tools are at my disposal.
        >
        Can you suggest a good resource that collects the CLR classes in a useful
        and easy-to-browse reference form? MSDN has good drill-down information,
        but it doesn't seem to be the right choice for browsing. It just takes too
        long to move from place to place for each tidbit of info.
        You can get a copy of the MSDN docs on your own PC.

        It is structured with namespaces so browsing should
        be possible.

        Not that much different from Python - just bigger,
        which is supposed to be a good thing.

        Arne

        Comment

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