Report design in a nutshell
Defining report data sources.
Using object data sources in Windows applications and Web sites.
Using Lists.
Using report parameters in local mode.
Designing master-detail reports.
Random thoughts about .Net development
Defining report data sources.
Using object data sources in Windows applications and Web sites.
Using Lists.
Using report parameters in local mode.
Designing master-detail reports.
Microsoft Report Viewer control enables applications that run on the .NET Framework to display reports designed using Microsoft reporting technology. The control can process and render reports independently using a built-in engine (‘local mode’) or it can display reports that are processed and rendered on a Report Server (‘remote mode’). There is a WinForms and a WebForms version of the control.
Breaking changes are changes in either the .NET Framework (runtime breaking changes) or Visual Studio (design/compile/project upgrade) that make certain application and development scenarios behave differently from the version 1.0 and 1.1 .NET Frameworks to the 2.0 version.Breaking changes were made for a number of reasons, including standards compliance, customer feedback, and correctness. Follow this link to review design-time and run-time breaking changes.
Looks like the MS Learning folks are offering a whole bunch of e-learning courses free for a limited time.
Special E-Learning Offers
Clinic 2551: Introduction to Visual Studio Team System
Course 2924: Building Data Components in Microsoft® Visual Studio® 2005
Course 2925: Building Managed Code for SQL Server 2005 and Creating SOA Applications with Visual Studio 2005
Course 2926: Building Windows® Forms Applications with Microsoft® Visual Studio® 2005
Course 2927: Building Web Applications with ASP.NET 2.0
Course 2928: Implementing Data Access and Security in an ASP.NET 2.0 Web Application
Course 2929: Implementing Wizards, Site Navigation, State Management, and Configuration in ASP.NET 2.0
Course 2930: Implementing Master Pages, Personalization, and Web Parts with ASP.NET 2.0
Get Ready for Visual Studio 2005 with Free* Microsoft E-Learning Courses and Clinics.