Series: Books for Professionals by Professionals

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Titles 
Advanced SharePoint Services Solutions (Books for Professionals by Professionals) by Scot P. Hillier
Beginning Python: From Novice to Professional (Beginning: From Novice to Professional) by Magnus Lie Hetland
Beginning Python: From Novice to Professional, Second Edition (Beginning from Novice to Professional) by Magnus Lie Hetland
The Berkeley DB Book (Books for Professionals by Professionals) by Himanshu Yadava
Building XNA 2.0 Games: A Practical Guide for Independent Game Development (Books for Professionals by Professionals) by James Silva
ColdFusion Web Development with Macromedia Dreamweaver MX 2004 (Books for Professionals by Professionals) by Jen DeHaan
The Definitive Guide to MySQL 5, Third Edition (Definitive Guide) by Michael Kofler
Expert C# Business Objects (Books for Professionals by Professionals) by Rockford Lhotka
Foundations of Ajax (Foundation) by Ryan Asleson
Foundations of Mac OS X Leopard Security (Foundations) by C et al Edge
Foundations of Popfly: Rapid Mashup Development (Books for Professionals by Professionals) by Eric Griffin
Office 2003 XML for Power Users (Books for Professionals by Professionals) by Matthew MacDonald
Painless Project Management with FogBugz (Books for Professionals by Professionals) by Mike Gunderloy
Practical Common Lisp by Peter Seibel
Practical Ruby Projects: Ideas for the Eclectic Programmer (Books for Professionals by Professionals) by Topher Cyll
Pro WPF in C# 2008: Windows Presentation Foundation with .NET 3.5, Second Edition (Books for Professionals by Professionals) by Matthew MacDonald
Spring Recipes: A Problem-Solution Approach (Books for Professionals by Professionals) by Gary Mak
Virtualization: From the Desktop to the Enterprise (Books for Professionals by Professionals) by Chris Wolf
Windows Vista: Beyond the Manual by Jonathan Hassell
Wireless Java: Developing with J2ME, Second Edition (Books for Professionals By Professionals) by Jonathan Knudsen
XNA 2.0 Game Programming Recipes: A Problem-Solution Approach (Books for Professionals by Professionals) by Riemer Grootjans

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Series authors (19)

Works (Title/Author/ISBN)

Series description

Series?!

How do series work?

To create a series or add a work to it, go to a "work" page. The "Common Knowledge" section now includes a "Series" field. Enter the name of the series to add the book to it.

Works can belong to more than one series. In some cases, as with Chronicles of Narnia, disagreements about order necessitate the creation of more than one series.

Tip: If the series has an order, add a number or other descriptor in parenthesis after the series title (eg., "Chronicles of Prydain (book 1)"). By default, it sorts by the number, or alphabetically if there is no number. If you want to force a particular order, use the | character to divide the number and the descriptor. So, "(0|prequel)" sorts by 0 under the label "prequel."

What isn't a series?

Series was designed to cover groups of books generally understood as such (see Wikipedia: Book series). Like many concepts in the book world, "series" is a somewhat fluid and contested notion. A good rule of thumb is that series have a conventional name and are intentional creations, on the part of the author or publisher. For now, avoid forcing the issue with mere "lists" of works possessing an arbitrary shared characteristic, such as relating to a particular place. Avoid series that cross authors, unless the authors were or became aware of the series identification (eg., avoid lumping Jane Austen with her continuators).

Also avoid publisher series, unless the publisher has a true monopoly over the "works" in question. So, the Dummies guides are a series of works. But the Loeb Classical Library is a series of editions, not of works.

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rfb (24)
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