In my spare time, I do a bit of home development primarily using free tools (Eclipse, Java, PHP, Ruby, Rails, etc.) as they are with what I'm most familiar; however, for my 9-to-5, I work as a developer in the .NET environment using all Microsoft tools. Our product is built using a framework that sits on top of .NET and that was developed in-house.
Although I've no complaints about our framework or what I do on a day-to-day basis, I'd like to get in deeper to the .NET Framework. I've got a personal copy of Visual Studio and am comfortable with all of the Microsoft Tools, though I'm less familiar with the framework and available libraries. I know that similar questions have been asked on this topic, but I'm hoping that the community can suggest book (or books) based on exactly what I'm looking for...
I develop web applications, so if the book is primarily focused on ASP.NET, then that's okay. If the book(s) primary focus is on desktop application programming with a side of ASP.NET, that's fine, too. My primary goal is to learn more about the .NET Framework and the associated libraries - not how Web Forms or Windows Forms are built. Whatever means used to that end are fine with me.
I don't want a book that gives lengthy tutorials on Windows Forms, controls, Web Forms, and/or any of the beginner or intro stuff. If there's more than one chapter dedicated to how to drop controls on a form and program events, then I'm not interested.
I'm indifferent about the language used in the book.
I'd like the book to have various assignments and/or walkthroughs of building full applications using the framework versus a physical copy of the API reference. Again, desktop or web-based programming is not really a big deal, but I lean in the direction of web applications.
If possible, I'd prefer the book not have contrived examples, but stuff that's a little more concrete and directly applicable to real world programming. Simple examples on using
StringBuilderas demonstrated through the use of concatenating all of the Star Trek character names are what I wanna avoid.
I'm comfortable with the .NET languages and the tools so I don't want primers on them. Above all else, I want to become more familiar with what is available in the .NET Framework such that I'm comfortable enough building applications outside of a framework built on top of .NET.
