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10 Projects You Can Do with Microsoft,(r) SQL Server 7
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Author: Karen Watterson, Bill Shadish, Garth Wells List Price: $59.99 Our Price: Click to see the latest and low price ISBN: 0471327514 Publisher: John Wiley & Sons (27 March, 2000) Edition: Paperback Sales Rank: 100,722 Average Customer Rating: 4 out of 5
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Customer ReviewsRating: 5 out of 5 VERY USEFUL PROJECTS I used two of the Projects immediately.As a new user of SQL, my understanding has been greatly enhanced by reviewing the theory and then seeing it applied in a project. I hope other authors follow the format of this book. Rating: 4 out of 5 Good book, but does have a few errors. I tend to agree with others about the examples in the text book. One minute you are reading along about the subject and you never know that you should be actually performing what you were reading. It is not as clear as I have seen in other hands-on books. The book is okay and I am not disappointed that I bought it. I am a novice SQL 7 user and the book has helped me out. As for the errors, I have not been able to find an errata for the book. However, with the errors I have found, I have been able to correct them myself after strong determination. Rating: 2 out of 5 UNEXPECTEDLY DISAPPOINTING Working on real example projects with SQL Server sounded like a great way to learn the application, so I really anticipated this book to be better than it turned out to be. The projects would be more fruitful if they were easier to follow. For one thing, the instructions never tell you when they're just giving you some background and when you should actually be following along with some "examples". You might be reading about the script to create a database (with them never once telling you to run the script) then you discover, several pages later, that you really needed to run that script in order to continue with what they're talking about. What's also frustrating is its tendency to go into step-by-step detail about some of the most basic things that most people know how to do, yet when it comes to the more expert implementation it just sort of breezes through like you should already be familiar with how this is done. Also, for a book that should do more with hands-on productions, it launches into too many filler pages of background information that we could get elsewhere.
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