Objected Oriented Programming With C# and Visual Studio 2017

Objected Oriented Programming With C# and Visual Studio 2017

Description

1. Friends, please take the time to review the curriculum carefully before buying so you can see exactly whether this is the right course for you. Please do not join until you have completed this step.

2. Please watch the free preview videos so you can see whether the presentation style works for you. Please remember  I am just one person, and I make my videos often after I have been working for many hours already.  PLease do not join until you have completed this step.

3. If something needs fixing, please let me know. Again, I’m just one person and not a big team of people. I will try to fix it as quickly as possible. Thank you.

Course Overview:

1. This is a course for those who are willing to push themselves. It’s not a “basic” introduction that gives an overly simplified perspective on OOP. In places, this code connects to the .NET framework, which is a professional level code base written in C#.  My promise is simple: take this course, and you’ll discover details not taught in any other course.  Speaking from experience, I can tell you that it is through consistent, daily effort, and I don’t mean little effort, but whole-hearted effort, that one makes progress when it comes to these technical subjects. That’s what years of struggling have taught me.

2. Please be sure to watch the free preview videos before enrolling so you can be sure the style of presentation works for you. 

3. I use pictures in the earlier videos to motivate some concepts. This is good for visual learners.

4. The more advanced videos on the bottom are more about just straight code and the .NET Framework. I have this section on the bottom so you can see how OOP actually looks in a professional level framework.

5. I have placed questions throughout the videos. I also mention the solutions from my perspective.

6. There are separate PDF’s placed under lesson resources. These contains completely separate examples. 

7. I discuss concepts from multiple perspectives where I feel it’s necessary to do so.  I think developing a multidimensional understanding of concepts results in a much deeper level of true understanding.

8. In some of the videos I place a lot of comments explaining each line bit by bit. I do this because I personally feel that reading comments makes a difference in terms of real understanding.

9. My explanations focus both on the how and the why, and I stress this difference throughout most of the course. 

10. This is not the first C# course you should be taking. 

11. The bottom sections are a break from the upper sections and show how C# is used in Windows Forms programs in actual code.

Who should not join: 

1. People wanting the how without the why. 

2. People looking for fast and superficial explanations.

3. People who are interested only in code without any visual explanations.

4. People who like fast talking.

5. People not looking for multiple explanations from multiple perspectives. 

Thank you for reading, and I will see you inside!

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