This work focuses on the use of the Microsoft Foundation Classes to develop software. Of course, software is a very broad term - some readers are doubtless interested in writing low-level technical applications that might not even have a user interface, while others could be interested in coding form-oriented applications that do little more the data validation and formatting before they hand the information off to a database server.
This work focuses on the use of the Microsoft Foundation Classes to develop software. Of course, software is a very broad term - some readers are doubtless interested in writing low-level technical applications that might not even have a user interface, while others could be interested in coding form-oriented applications that do little more the data validation and formatting before they hand the information off to a database server.