Training Course: Advanced Web Application Technologies with Microsoft Visual Studio 2005 (2544, MOC 2544)
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Training Course Summary:
Elements of this syllabus are subject to change.This two-day instructor-led workshop provides students with the knowledge and skills to develop Microsoft ASP.NET 2.0 Web applications using Microsoft Visual Studio 2005. The workshop focuses on advanced user interfaces, Web site functionality, and implementation details using the advanced features of ASP.NET 2.0 and Visual Studio 2005.
After completing this workshop, students will be able to:
• Build dynamic Web applications.
• Create controls for Web applications.
• Optimize Web applications.
• Build customizable Web applications.
• Build Web Part pages and Web Parts.
Pre-Requisites:
Before attending this workshop, students must:• Have attended or studied Workshop 2543A, Core Web Application Technologies with Visual Studio 2005, or possess equivalent knowledge and skills.
• Know how to use delegates and events.
• Know how to improve the security of .NET Framework 2.0 applications.
• Be able to use instrumentation in code.
Who Should Attend:
This workshop is intended for corporate or independent software vendor (ISV) application developers who have a desire to learn more about specific technology areas in Web application development.Training Course Overview/Content:
Unit 1: Building Dynamic Web ApplicationsThis unit introduces many different aspects of dynamic Web applications. It includes discussions on creating and configuring controls at run time. It then explains how to build dynamic globalization features into a Web application to ensure that it is localizable, including using localized resources and applying different master page layouts in response to culture and language settings. It concludes with explanations about how to enable dynamic configuration for site administrators.
Lessons
• Dynamic Control Creation
• Localization and Globalization
• Dynamic Master Pages
• Dynamic Web Configuration
Lab 1: Building Dynamic Web Applications
• Exercise 1. Dynamically Adding and Configuring Controls
• Exercise 2. Dynamically Applying Master Pages
• Exercise 3. Adding Localization Features
• Exercise 4. Dynamically Configuring Web Applications
After completing this unit, students will be able to:
• Explain dynamic control creation in ASP.NET 2.0.
• Add and configure controls dynamically.
• Explain how to incorporate globalization and localization features into Web applications.
• Add localization features to a Web application.
• Describe when and how to implement dynamic master pages.
• Apply master pages dynamically.
• Describe dynamic Web configuration scenarios.
• Dynamically configure Web applications.
Unit 2: Creating Controls for Web Applications
This unit explains how developers create different types of controls for different scenarios. The different types of controls include user controls, custom Web server controls, composite Web server controls, and templated controls.
Lessons
• User Controls
• Custom Web Server Controls
• Composite Web Server Controls
• Templated Controls
Lab 2: Creating Controls for Web Applications
• Exercise 1. Creating User Controls
• Exercise 2. Creating Custom Web Server Controls
• Exercise 3. Creating Composite Web Server Controls
• Exercise 4. Creating Templated Controls
After completing this unit, students will be able to:
• Describe user controls and the underlying enabling technologies.
• Create user controls.
• Describe custom Web server controls and the underlying enabling technologies.
• Create Web server controls.
• Describe composite controls and how composite controls are created.
• Create composite Web server controls.
• Describe templated controls and the interfaces that enable their implementation.
• Create templated controls.
Unit 3: Optimizing Web Application Performance
This unit introduces topics that will help you improve the performance of Web applications. It describes how the Page Scripting Object Model can help reduce the number of round trips for communication between the server and the browser, and then explains how tracing and instrumentation can be used to monitor and, therefore, improve the performance of a Web application. The unit discusses how caching and asynchronous processing can help increase Web application performance; it then highlights some considerations that developers must address if the Web application is to be deployed in a Web farm environment.
Lessons
• The Page Scripting Object Model
• Tracing and Instrumentation in Web Applications
• ASP.NET 2.0 Caching Techniques
• Asynchronous Processing in Web Applications
• Web Farm Development Considerations
Lab 3: Optimizing Web Application Performance
• Exercise 1. Accessing the Page Scripting Object Model
• Exercise 2. Implementing ASP.NET Caching Techniques
• Exercise 3. Implementing Tracing and Instrumentation Techniques in Web Applications
• Exercise 4. Implementing Asynchronous Processing in Web Applications
After completing this unit, students will be able to:
• Describe the Page Scripting Object Model.
• Access Page Scripting Object Model functionality.
• Explain how to use tracing and instrumentation to monitor and improve th
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