ICT Education Newsletter
This training is for students preparing to become certified for the 70-562, Microsoft .NET Framework 3.5, ASP.NET Application Development exam. The Microsoft Official Academic Course (MOAC) lessons correlate and are mapped to this Microsoft Certified Professional Developer (MCPD) 70-562 certification exam.
Candidates for this exam use Microsoft Visual Studio in a team-based, medium-sized to large development environment. Candidates should have a minimum of two to three years of experience developing Web-based applications by using Microsoft ASP.NET.
Candidates should also have a minimum of one year of experience with the following:
Database access by using Microsoft ADO.NET classes in the Microsoft .NET Framework
Web services
State management
ASP.NET configuration
Monitoring Web applications
Debugging
Application and page life-cycle management
Security aspects such as Forms Authentication and membership and roles
ECMAScript (JavaScript, Microsoft JScript)
Internet Information Server (IIS)
Candidates should be very familiar with Visual Studio 2005 or later and the .NET Framework classes that are related to ASP.NET and ADO.NET. In addition, candidates should have a good grasp of ASP.NET AJAX.
Module 1 : Configuring and Deploying Web Applications
Configure providers. May include but is not limited to: personalization, membership, data sources, site map, resource, security.
Configure authentication, authorization, and impersonation. May include but is not limited to: Forms Authentication, Windows Authentication.
Configure projects, solutions, and reference assemblies. May include but is not limited to: local assemblies, shared assemblies (GAC), Web application projects, solutions.
Configure session state by using Microsoft SQL Server, State Server, or InProc. May include but is not limited to: setting the timeout; cookieless sessions.
Publish Web applications. May include but is not limited to: FTP, File System, or HTTP from Visual Studio.
Configure application pools.
Compile an application by using Visual Studio or command-line tools. May include but is not limited to: aspnet_compiler.exe, Just-In-Time (JIT) compiling, aspnet_merge.exe.
Module 2 : Consuming and Creating Server Controls
Implement data-bound controls. May include but is not limited to: DataGrid, DataList, Repeater, ListView, GridView, FormView, DetailsView, TreeView, DataPager.
Load user controls dynamically.
Create and consume custom controls. May include but is not limited to: registering controls on a page, creating templated controls.
Implement client-side validation and server-side validation. May include but is not limited to: RequiredFieldValidator, CompareValidator, RegularExpressionValidator, CustomValidator, RangeValidator.
Consume standard controls. May include but is not limited to: Button, TextBox, DropDownList, RadioButton, CheckBox, HyperLink, Wizard, MultiView.
Module 3 : Working with Data and Services
Read and write XML data. May include but is not limited to: XmlDocument, XPathNavigator, XPathNodeIterator, XPathDocument, XmlReader, XmlWriter, XmlDataDocument, XmlNamespaceManager.
Manipulate data by using DataSet and DataReader objects.
Call a Windows Communication Foundation (WCF) service or a Web service from an ASP.NET Web page. May include but is not limited to: App_WebReferences; configuration.
Implement a DataSource control. May include but is not limited to: LinqDataSource, ObjectDataSource, XmlDataSource, SqlDataSource.
Bind controls to data by using data binding syntax.
Module 4 : Troubleshooting and Debugging Web Applications
Configure debugging and custom errors. May include but is not limited to: Configuring the customErrors mode and debugging options.
Set up an environment to perform remote debugging.
Debug unhandled exceptions when using ASP.NET AJAX. May include but is not limited to: client-side Sys.Debug methods; attaching a debugger to Windows Internet Explorer.
Implement tracing of a Web application. May include but is not limited to: Trace.axd, Trace=True on @Page directive.
Debug deployment issues. May include but is not limited to: aspnet_regiis.exe; creating an IIS Web application; setting the .NET Framework version.
Monitor Web applications. May include but is not limited to: health monitoring by using WebEvent, performance counters.
Module 5 : Working with ASP.NET AJAX and Client-Side Scripting
Implement Web Forms by using ASP.NET AJAX. May include but is not limited to: EnablePartialRendering, Triggers, ChildrenAsTriggers, Scripts, Services, UpdateProgress, Timer, ScriptManagerProxy.
Interact with the ASP.NET AJAX client-side library. May include but is not limited to: JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) objects; handling ASP.NET AJAX events.
Consume services from client scripts.
Create and register client script. May include but is not limited to: inline, included .js file, embedded JavaScript resource, created from server code.
Access device capabilities. May include but is not limited to: working with emulators.
Control device-specific rendering. May include but is not limited to: DeviceSpecific control; device filters; control templates.
Add mobile Web controls to a Web page. May include but is not limited to: StyleSheet controls; List controls; Container controls.
Implement control adapters. May include but is not limited to: App_Browsers; rendering by using ChtmlTextWriter or XhtmlTextWriter.
Module 7 : Programming Web Applications
Customize the layout and appearance of a Web page. May include but is not limited to: CSS, Themes and Skins, Master Pages, and Web Parts, App_Themes, StyleSheetTheme.
Work with ASP.NET intrinsic objects. May include but is not limited to: Request, Server, Application, Session, Response, HttpContext.
Implement globalization and accessibility. May include but is not limited to: resource files, culture settings, RegionInfo, App_GlobalResources, App_LocalResources, TabIndex, AlternateText , GenerateEmptyAlternateText, AccessKey, Label.AssociatedControlID.
Implement business objects and utility classes. May include but is not limited to: App_Code , external assemblies.
Implement session state, view state, control state, cookies, cache, or application state.
Handle events and control page flow. May include but is not limited to: page events, control events, application events, and session events, cross-page posting; Response.Redirect, Server.Transfer, IsPostBack, setting AutoEventWireup.
Implement the Generic Handler.