Introduction
I like writing because every book is a birth. Books are neat little packages that contain information that has been pulled out of mind stuff, written down, edited and re-edited, printed, and glued together. When I get my author copies there is always a sense of satisfaction at having been part of creating something. Then, I take a deep breath and wait to see what the readers think.
Components and controls are always just one part of application development. Developers have to get requirements, design solutions and databases, and assemble all of the various pieces and then refine the total effort. Writing books and software follow some of the same practices: define, design, implement, debug/edit, ship, and support. In either kind of implementation, whether book or software, sometimes requirements and features make it in and sometimes they don't.
This book was originally slated at 400 pages. There were so many more features that I wanted to cover that almost 200 additional pages were added. In truth, there were discussions we had internally about how we could have provided more samples and probably produced 1,000 more pages. DevExpress offers many rich products and this book really just focuses on the ASP.NET controls. (A WinForms book could easily cover its own 1,000 pages.)
Although many people participate in the process of a book, writing a book for the most part is about telling a story from one person's perspective. For this book I looked at all of the products DevExpress ...
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