Professional Crystal Reports for Visual Studio .NET

March 13, 2008 · 3 Comments

  • Book Title: Professional Crystal Reports for Visual Studio .NET
  • Author: David McAmis
  • Publisher: Wrox Press
  • Year: 2002

Table of content

  • Introduction
  • Chapter 1 - Crystal Reports.NET Overview
  • Chapter 2 - Getting Started with Crystal Reports.NET
  • Chapter 3 - Report Integration for Windows-Based Applications
  • Chapter 4 - Report Integration for Web-Based Applications
  • Chapter 5 - Creating XML Report Web Services
  • Chapter 6 - Working with .NET Data
  • Chapter 7 - Formulas and Logic
  • Chapter 8 - Working with the Crystal Reports Engine
  • Chapter 9 - Distributing Your Application
  • Appendix A - Troubleshooting
  • Appendix B - Migrating Applications to Crystal Reports.NET
  • Appendix C – Crystal vs. Basic Syntax

Description

Welcome to Professional Crystal Reports for Visual Studio .NET. Crystal Reports is one of the world’s leading software packages for creating interactive reports. The reports let users view data and the trends therein, and they can be published on the Web or integrated within applications. With more than four million licenses shipped, Crystal Reports is the leader among Windows report writers. Crystal Reports has been in the Visual Studio box since 1993, but the latest version, Crystal Reports .NET, is now integrated more closely than ever before with Visual Studio .NET. This book will detail the functionality provided with Crystal Reports for Visual Studio .NET, and how, when, and where you should integrate reports into your .NET applications.

This book is for programmers who want a comprehensive guide to the functionality included with Crystal Reports for Visual Studio .NET. It’s assumed that you have some knowledge of .NET and experience with Visual Studio .NET.

This book is mainly aimed at readers who have some experience with Crystal Reports. However, the book will prove valuable for readers who are new to Crystal Reports, and want a guide to this free reporting tool they’ve discovered within Visual Studio .NET.

Categories: .NET · Books · Crystal Report · Programming · Reporting

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