| | From Angela Bradley, your About Programming Editor Dear Subscriber, Welcome to this week's edition of your About Programming Newsletter. In this issue we look at Access 2010 books, the difference between GET and POST, as well as other programming articles. Have a great week! | | Access 2010 Books for Beginners So, you'd like to learn more about Microsoft Access 2010 and you don't know where to begin. I've selected seven of my favorite introductory-level Access books for your perusal. | Do you know when to use GET vs. POST in an HTML form? There are two methods you can use to transfer data in HTML forms. But it's one thing to know the two methods, it's another to know which is appropriate to use. This article will help explain when to use GET or POST in your HTML forms. | The Form as a Class While working on a new article about Overloads, Overrides, and Shadows (look for it soon), I ran across some additional information that extends an earlier article about instantiating the Form object. | Worked Example: Tabular Data So much is made of the base data structures in Ruby. It's either an Array or a Hash or it isn't anything. But it's quite easy to make other related data structures out of these base data structures, such as a two dimensional array. Making an array of arrays in Ruby is not hard at all. | | | | Programming Ads | | | | Featured Articles | | | | | | Sign up for more free newsletters on your favorite topics | | | | You are receiving this newsletter because you subscribed to the About Programming newsletter. If you wish to change your email address or unsubscribe, please click here. About respects your privacy: Our Privacy Policy Contact Information: 249 West 17th Street New York, NY, 10011 © 2012 About.com | | | | SQL Books | | Advertisement | |
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