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Paperback Visio 2003 Bible Book

ISBN: 0764557246

ISBN13: 9780764557248

Visio 2003 Bible

Providing comprehensive coverage of Visio's large feature set for technical and engineering professionals, the book begins with a quick introduction to the intuitive interface This book quickly moves into the specialized stencils, shapes, and templates used in software and network design and documentation, engineering disciplines, and project management Features strong coverage of Visio's tight integration with other Microsoft Office products and...

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Good

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Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Visio 2003 Bible

As an application training specialist, I'm always looking for books I can recommend to my students, and this is definitely one of them. This book offers a great one-stop resource for all things Visio!

Visio 2003 Bible

An excellent book that shows you how to get the most out of Visio. Although the explanations of various principles behind the application are brief, it provides enough detail to help you understand the basic concept and allows you to effectively use the information in the book.

Visio 2003 Bible review

This book is well organized and turned out to be more comprehensive than I expected. It is clearly written, and should meet the needs of most Visio users.

This book was written for a programmer.

I am a programmer myself who didn't paid too much attention to MS Visio previous to my encounter with this book. Like the previous poster, I can "wink" my way through Visio for a fairly decent drawings, part of the reason for this is because I have worked with programs like Corel, Photoshop, video editing programs, Dream Weaver, Flash, etc, where I had to worked with various drawing tools, layers, rulers, zoom etc. Then suddenly I was offered a nice job with a well known IT company, and the position requires me to use MS Visio extensively. I bought the MS Visio inside out first, but quickly found the book boring and uninspiring. So I returned the inside out book and bought this one ... Boy, am I glad I did. I read a few pages and was completely sold. First, the author's writing style makes studying this dry subject very exciting. Secondly, She used terms I can relate as a programmer, for example, she refers to shapes in stencils as masters (hint: Classes), and a copied of the shape as instances (hint: inherited objects), behaviors as methods etc. For example, the MS Inside Out book note that shapes are powerful and smart (you would think to yourself: how smart?). This book relates shapes to classes, and we programmers know how powerful classes can be: they are the foundation to object oriented programming designs. Here's an example of how powerful classes can be: we programmers know that in designing any serious projects, we should never work with base classes, rather we should create our own classes by inherit from the base classes we need (thus creating a layer on top of the bass class while preserving essentially the same functionality). This approach is fairly common in FoxPro programming but equally applies to the .NET platform as well. The power comes in when we have to make changes to the base objects ... any changes make to them will filter down the chain to all the child objects. Thus, say your boss wants you to flowchart the whole business process using MS Visio and he wants all the shapes colored gray, then next month, he wants you to change all your shapes to light blue. Well, if you created your objects using the base classes, you are stuck; however, if you created another layer on top of your base layer in your design, it would only take you minutes to deliver the revised project to your boss. This is power. So far so good, I will add to this review after I dig into the text some more.

Boy, this sure opened my eyes!

I just had my eyes opened to all that Visio can do by reviewing the book Visio 2003 Bible by Bonnie Biafore (Wiley). Chapter list: Getting Started with Visio; Getting Started with Drawings; Working with Visio Files; Working with Shapes; Connecting Shapes; Working with Text; Formatting Visio Elements; Inserting, Linking, and Embedding Objects; Importing, Exporting, and Publishing Visio Data to the Web; Linking Shapes with Data; Collaborating with Others; Building Block Diagrams; Constructing Charts and Graphs; Working with Organization Charts; Working with Flowcharts; Documenting Business Processes; Scheduling Projects with Visio; Documenting Brainstorming Sessions; Modeling and Documenting Databases; Building UML Models; Building Software Development Diagrams; Mapping Web Sites; Creating Network Diagrams; Working with Scaled Drawings; Creating Scaled Plan Drawings; Laying Out Architectural and Engineering Plans; Integrating CAD and Visio; Working with Engineering Drawings; Creating and Customizing Templates; Creating and Customizing Stencils; Creating and Customizing Shapes; Customizing Shapes Using ShapeSheets; Formatting with Styles; Customizing Toolbars and Menus; Automating Visio; Installing Visio 2003; Visio 2003 Help Resources; Additional Resources for Templates and Stencils; Keyboard Shortcuts; Template and Stencil Reference; Index As you can tell, there's not much left to cover after Bonnie gets done. :-) As an IT professional, I've used Visio for the basics. Someone wants a flowchart, I can fake my way through a decent looking diagram. And that was pretty much all I thought Visio could do... basic drawings. But going through this book was an eye-opener. I didn't know that you could output Visio output for the web. I didn't know you could hook shapes up to data sources. And I *really* didn't know that Visio could produce a site map of a web site! Guess what I'll be trying at work tomorrow... The author does a great job of covering the material at a level that everyone can understand. Due to the comprehensive nature of the book, I think that all levels of users can get something from the book, too. Those who are new to Visio will get a good foundation in the basics. Those (like me) who haven't explored past the basics will discover all sorts of new toys. And experts may find a feature or two that they didn't know about. Definitely a keeper that will end up on my bookshelf at work, and one that I'll have to guard against greedy fingers...
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