This book, first published in 1637, was the first full-length treatise on suicide published in English. Originally published in 1988 as part of the Tavistock Classics in the History of Psychiatry series, the introduction by Michael MacDonald places the book in the context of attitudes to suicide in its day, as well as showing some of the ways that this theological book is also a study of the psychology and sociology of suicide. He discusses the evolution of the law of suicide and analyses the religious beliefs held about it at the time, before going on to look at John Sym himself and the structure of his book.
WARNING: This book is NOT for everyone! It makes use of deprecated functionality in SharePoint 2013. It is not recommended to buy this book if... ...you already own InfoPath 2010 Cookbook 2 and/or InfoPath 2010 Cookbook 5, if you own any other InfoPath with SharePoint book, or if you are looking to replace InfoPath with another forms creation tool. This book is not for: SharePoint consultants, SharePoint administrators, SharePoint architects, advanced SharePoint/InfoPath users, programmers, or anyone looking to replace InfoPath today. What is this book all about? InfoPath 2013 Cookbook 2: 121 Codeless Recipes for SharePoint 2013 is for semi-technical professionals who have already mastered the basics of designing form templates in InfoPath and who are familiar with the basics of SharePoint 2013, but who have yet to start integrating InfoPath forms with SharePoint. InfoPath 2013 Cookbook 2 extends the skills acquired from InfoPath 2013 Cookbook: 121 Codeless Recipes for Beginners by showing you how to integrate InfoPath 2013 primarily with SharePoint 2013 and secondarily with SharePoint Designer 2013, Excel, Access, and Word without writing a single line of code. InfoPath 2013 Cookbook 2 covers the basics of designing SharePoint list forms, SharePoint form library forms, SharePoint workflow forms, and document information panels. In addition, you will learn how to work with SharePoint lists as well as how to create workflows in SharePoint Designer 2013 that make use of, create, or interact with InfoPath 2013 forms. All solutions in InfoPath 2013 Cookbook 2 are codeless (they contain no code that needs to be compiled; this excludes the use of XML technologies such as XPath and XSLT) and the book is comprised of 121 recipes of which 40% covers the basics of working with InfoPath forms in SharePoint and 60% are solutions for integrating InfoPath with SharePoint. The solutions in this book have been tested to work on SharePoint Server 2013 and SharePoint Server 2013 with Service Pack 1. See more and get more... Please make use of Amazon's "Look Inside" feature to see the full table of contents and browse sample recipes in the book before purchasing. Please visit the Support web site mentioned in the book to download digital files for the book and to get bonus solutions online.
This book is NOT suitable for absolute beginners! InfoPath 2010 Cookbook 5 is for semi-technical to technical professionals who have already mastered the basics of designing form templates in InfoPath and who already know how to work with Excel 2010 and SharePoint 2010. InfoPath 2010 Cookbook 5 extends skills acquired from all previous books in the InfoPath 2010 Cookbook series of books and is an InfoPath-centric book that teaches intermediate to advanced InfoPath users how to combine InfoPath 2010 with Excel 2010 and Excel Services in SharePoint 2010. The solutions in InfoPath 2010 Cookbook 5 build basic knowledge before moving onto solutions that integrate InfoPath with Excel and Excel Services and that may or may not require writing code. Chapters 1 and 2 are for non-programmers, while Chapter 3 is for VBA, C#, or Visual Basic .NET programmers who want to combine InfoPath with Excel by writing code. InfoPath 2010 Cookbook 5 consists of two-thirds codeless (=without code that requires compiling) solutions and one-third solutions that require writing code. InfoPath 2010 Cookbook 5 teaches how to: Access data in Excel workbooks that are stored locally or in SharePoint 2010 from within InfoPath forms. Connect InfoPath forms to Excel workbooks through Excel Web Access. Design InfoPath forms that can create, read, or update Excel workbooks that are stored in SharePoint 2010 using Excel Services. Use a large range of Excel functions in formulas to create codeless InfoPath solutions. Write VBA code to create, read, or update InfoPath forms. Write C# code to create, read, or update InfoPath forms. Write Visual Basic .NET code to create, read, or update InfoPath forms. Write code that uses the Excel Object Model and the Open XML SDK. Please visit the web site listed under the Support section in the book to download the digital files for the book.
InfoPath 2010 Cookbook 4: 101 Code Recipes for VB Developers covers the basics of writing code for InfoPath 2010 form templates from the ground up before venturing into more complex topics such as writing code for combining InfoPath with web services, databases such as Microsoft Access 2010 and SQL Server 2008, Word 2010, and SharePoint 2010. The level of InfoPath 2010 Cookbook 4 runs from beginner to advanced and is targeted towards technical professionals who have already mastered the basics of designing form templates in InfoPath 2010 (such as the material covered in InfoPath 2010 Cookbook: 101 Codeless Recipes for Beginners), who have already mastered the basics of writing Visual Basic .NET code (at least 6 months to 1 year of VB .NET programming experience is recommended), but who have yet to extend their programming skills to writing code for InfoPath 2010. InfoPath 2010 Cookbook 4 consists of 101 tutorials spread out across 9 chapters. Each tutorial consists of a problem description, step-by-step instructions describing the solution, and a discussion section explaining the code and other key concepts to deepen your understanding. The first 5 chapters of the book cover the basics of writing code for InfoPath 2010, while the last 4 chapters of the book cover some of the most often requested solutions when combining InfoPath with web services, databases, and SharePoint. Summary of the book's contents: Configuring InfoPath Designer 2010 for writing code Starting to write VB .NET code for InfoPath 2010 forms in Visual Studio Tools for Applications Writing VB .NET code to manipulate form data and controls Writing VB .NET code to access InfoPath forms from external components Writing VB .NET code to connect to and perform CRUD operations on a Microsoft Access database Writing VB .NET code to integrate InfoPath with Word 2010 Writing VB .NET code to integrate InfoPath with web services (and SQL Server) Writing VB .NET code to integrate InfoPath with SharePoint 2010 Please visit the web site listed under the Support section in the book to get instructions for downloading the digital files for the book.
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