Aug 5, 2008

Microsoft Excel and Access Integration: With Microsoft Office 2007

Ebooks Microsoft Excel and Access Integration: With Microsoft Office 2007 (Paperback) Description:

Although many people rarely go from Excel into Access or vice versa, you should know that Microsoft actually designed these applications to work together. In this book, you’ll discover how Access benefits from Excel’s flexible presentation layer and versatile analysis capabilities, while Access’s relational database structure and robust querying tools enhance Excel. Once you learn to make the two work together, you’ll find that your team’s productivity is the real winner.

From the Back Cover

Excel users. Access users. You're probably among the majority, living in one camp or the other but rarely crossing between the two. Yet Microsoft designed these applications to work together. In this book, you'll discover how Access benefits from Excel's flexible presentation layer and versatile analysis capabilities, while Access's relational database structure and robust querying tools enhance Excel. Once you learn to make the team work, you'll find that your team's productivity is the real winner.

* Move data easily between Excel and Access
* Store Excel data in a structured relational database
* Create Excel PivotTables with Access data
* Report Access data using Excel's presentation layer
* Use VBA, ADO, and SQL to move data from one application to the other
* Save time and increase productivity by automating redundant processes with VBA
* Simplify integration tasks using XML
* Integrate Excel data into other Office applications



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Rails for Java Developers

This eBooka-Rails for Java Developers [ILLUSTRATED] (Paperback) Description:

Many Java developers are now looking at Ruby, and the Ruby on Rails web framework. If you are one of them, this book is your guide. Written by experienced developers who love both Java and Ruby, this book will show you, via detailed comparisons and commentary, how to translate your hard-earned Java knowledge and skills into the world of Ruby and Rails.

If you are a Java programmer, you shouldn't have to start at the very beginning! You already have deep experience with the design issues that inspired Rails, and can use this background to quickly learn Ruby and Rails. But Ruby looks a lot different from Java, and some of those differences support powerful abstractions that Java lacks. We'll be your guides to this new, but not strange, territory.

In each chapter, we build a series of parallel examples to demonstrate some facet of web development. Because the Rails examples sit next to Java examples, you can start this book in the middle, or anywhere else you want. You can use the Java version of the code, plus the analysis, to quickly grok what the Rails version is doing. We have carefully cross-referenced and indexed the book to facilitate jumping around as you need to.

Thanks to your background in Java, this one short book can cover a half-dozen books' worth of ideas:
# Programming Ruby
# Building MVC (Model/View/Controller) Applications
# Unit and Functional Testing
# Security
# Project Automation
# Configuration
# Web Services

About the Author
Stuart Dabbs Halloway is a co-founder of Relevance, LLC. Stuart is the author of Component Development for the Java Platform and regularly speaks at industry events including the No Fluff, Just Stuff Java Symposiums and the Pragmatic Studio. Prior to founding Relevance, Stuart was the Chief Technical Officer at DevelopMentor, the industry's leading training company focusing exclusively on software developers. Long, long ago, Stuart worked as a lead engineer and project manager, shipping successful projects for Prentice Hall, National Geographic, and Duke University's Humanities Computing Facility.

Justin Gehtland is a founding partner of Relevance, LLC. Justin has been a programmer, manager, consultant and trainer in the software business since 1994. He's currently focused on Ruby, Ruby on Rails, and Ajax. Justin is the co-author of Pragmatic Ajax, Spring: A Developer's Notebook, J2EE In a Nutshell (3rd Edition), Better, Faster, Lighter Java, Effective Visual and Windows Forms Programming in Visual Basic .NET. Prior to founding Relevance, Justin served as Director of Information Systems for DevelopMentor. Before that, he served as an instructor, teaching COM and COM+ programming as well as web development. He has been the lead architect, lead programmer and project manager on numerous successful projects for clients such as Shaw Systems, GE Medical Systems, Mosby Publishing, National Geographic, and Deloitte and Touche.




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