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ASP to ASP.NET: The lifetime of an ASP.Net page
Evil terms such as "object-oriented programming" and "modularised and reusable code" start bubbling up to the surface from programming's dank depths. But don't fear. In this article, Chris examines the mindset and code changes required to grapple with the lifetime of an ASP.NET page, Event Handling, Sessions and State, Configuration, The Application and Cache Objects, Managed providers in ADO.NET, and Disconnected Adapters, Views and Tables. And we guarantee that you'll still be sane by the end.
Chris Ullman
Chris Ullman is an ex-Wrox Press and Glasshaus author who has spent many years stewing in ASP/ASP.NET, like a teabag left too long in the pot. Coming from a Computer Science background, he started initially as a UNIX/Linux guru, who gravitated towards MS during the summer of ASP (1997). Since then he has written on over 20 books, as lead author for the bestselling Beginning ASP/ASP.NET series, and has contributed chapters to books on PHP, ColdFusion, JavaScript, Web Services, C#, XML and other Internet-related technologies too esoteric to mention, now swallowed up in the quicksands of the dot.com boom. Quitting Wrox in August 2001, he continued life as as a freelance developer and author while helping to bring up his first child, Nye.