By David Stutz, Ted Neward, Geoff Shilling
First Edition
March 2003
Pages: 378
ISBN 10: 0-596-00351-X |
ISBN 13: 9780596003517
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(Average of 2 Customer Reviews)
Shared Source CLI Essentials provides a road map for anyone wishing to navigate, understand, or alter the Microsoft® Shared Source CLI ("Rotor") code. Written by members of the core team that designed the .NET Framework, this book is for anyone who wants a deeper understanding of what goes on under the hood of the .NET runtime and the ECMA CLI.
Full Description
- The CLI type system
- Component packaging and assemblies
- Type loading and JIT Compilation
- Managed code and the execution engine
- Garbage collection and memory management
- The Platform Adaptation Layer (PAL): a portability layer for Win32®, Mac OS® X, and FreeBSD
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Browse within this book
Cover | Table of Contents | Index | Sample Chapter | Colophon
Book details
First Edition: March 2003
ISBN: 0-596-00351-X
Pages: 378
Average Customer Reviews: ![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
(Based on 2 Reviews)
Featured customer reviews
Shared Source CLI Essentials Review, August 30 2002
Oreilley has had the reputation of publishing state of the art books and this one speaks very high about that. After going through the couple of drafts, I am looking forward to buying mine soon! Would appretiate if David Stuzx writes more and especailly on the .net framework!
Shared Source CLI Essentials Review, August 09 2002
Great book, can't wait so get it. I hope David Stutz will write more books like this one.
Media reviews
"'Shared Source CLI' is a very thorough book on a very ambitious concept: take the .NET CLR and make it--or at least part of it--run on *nix based systems...Just to save you the effort of downloading, the book also comes with a CD containing enough for you to build and run the CLI on FreeBSD, OS X, or Windows. This book certainly isn't for everyone, but if you're interested in running the .NET framework on a non-Windows OS or really want to get into the meat of the CLI, then this is certainly a book you'll want to pick up.
--Salt Lake City ColdFusion User Group, November 2003
http://www.slcfug.org/index.cfm?pageID=57






