Microsoft Visual Basic 2005 Step by Step (Step by Step (Microsoft))

Chapter 1

Exploring the Visual Studio Integrated Development Environment

After Completing this chapter, you will be able to:

Microsoft Visual Basic 2005 is an important upgrade and enhancement of the popular Visual Basic development system and an iterative upgrade of the Microsoft Visual Basic .NET 2003 software. This chapter gives you the skills you need to quickly and efficiently get up and running with the Visual Studio 2005 Integrated Development Environment (IDE)—the place where you will write Visual Basic programs. You should read this chapter whether you are new to Visual Basic programming or you have used previous versions of Visual Basic or Visual Studio.

In this chapter, you'll learn how to start Visual Studio 2005 and how to use the IDE to open and run a simple program. You'll learn the essential Visual Studio menu commands and programming procedures; you'll open and run a simple Visual Basic program named Music Trivia; you'll change a programming setting called a property; and you'll practice moving, sizing, docking, and auto hiding tool windows. You'll also learn how to open a Web browser within Visual Studio, how to get more information by using online Help, and how to exit the development environment and save your changes.

Upgrade Notes: Migrating Visual Basic 6 Code to Visual Basic 2005

Microsoft Visual Basic 6.0 has been an extremely successful product. Even though Visual Basic 6 was released in 1998, many software developers, including a large number of professional programmers who work outside of North America, continue to use this tool to develop and modify applications for Microsoft Windows. If you are thinking about upgrading to Visual Basic 2005 but are most comfortable with the commands and features in Visual Basic 6, there are some important product features and migration tips that you should be aware of. To help programmers who are moving from Visual Basic 6, I plan to start each chapter of this book with a sidebar that highlights the feature changes that you should be aware of. (If you are not upgrading from Visual Basic 6, simply skip the sidebar.)

Remember that you don't need any programming experience to learn Visual Basic 2005 using this book. But if you have some Visual Basic 6 knowledge already, you will benefit from an executive summary spelling out the differences. So to begin with, here is my list of upgrade notes for Chapter 1:

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