As a BizTalk moderator, more and more people are asking me how to learn BizTalk and how to use BizTalk. Are there any books to recommend? Since BizTalk2004 in, I have used only one "book", which is the help Document of BizTalk. I also remember that the Document contained in BizTalk was rare. Later, the latest Document is continuously updated on MSDN. Later, with Chinese characters, reading speed was accelerated !. There are three simple examples in Document. The completion of these three examples gives me a basic understanding of BizTalk Designer. A series of questions, such as where to start a project.
Therefore, I have been recommending BizTalk Document.
If you have done the three examples in the document, you will be getting started. Of course, you need to improve it. Go to the installation directory and find SDK \ Samples. Here are all the basic BizTalk development examples. Of course, at this time, we will not understand so many BizTalk interfaces, there is no other way, go to Document to find it. It is your teacher.
If you have other questions that cannot find the answer, you should discuss them (for example, CSDN \ Enterprise Development \ BizTalk ). Of course, someone may want to ask someone directly to talk about the problem on IM for a long time. In fact, this is not necessarily the best effect. It may delay a lot of time on a small problem. Forum discussions can allow more people to participate and express more opinions. Sometimes it may take a long time, but the effect is the best.
If you want to grow rapidly, join BizTalk training. (There is no such service in China)
Let's look at what foreigners think:
BizTalk Server is a large and complicated product. We all know that. And those who are just starting, will know it soon enough. So how do you learn it all? Where do you start? Depending on your situation, you may have to resort to self-study. If that is the case, start with the documentation! It is a large (1 + million words), technically deep, and very thorough doc set. with tutorials, throughs, samples, and specify tural content available, you can learn a great deal. what's even better is the various formats... online at MSDN, a downloadable chm or PDF format. in addition to the documentation, there is a thriving community around BizTalk Server with newsgroups and Blogs.
Ref: http://blogs.msdn.com/luke/archive/2006/08/25/719407.aspx