TL;DRAbstract
This chapter is the shortest one in this book, but in many ways, it's one of the most essential ones. Up to this point, you've read and learned about many of the basic building blocks you can utilize to create sound scientific utilities and applications. However, once you develop that "killer app," you need a way to distribute your application to other computers. There's no reason you should limit yourself to only running your application in the VB IDE—you should be able to create a software package that can run on any Windows-based PC (i.e., Windows 95/98/Me/NT/2000/XP). In this chapter, you'll examine how to package your applications and use the Setup Wizard to add deployment capabilities. So open up that newly finished program of yours and let's walk through the process of creating a finished user product.
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This chapter is the shortest one in this book, but in many ways, it's one of the most essential ones. Up to this point, you've read and learned about many of the basic building blocks you can utilize to create sound scientific utilities and applications. However, once you develop that "killer app," you need a way to distribute your application to other computers. There's no reason you should limit yourself to only running your application in the VB IDE—you should be able to create a software package that can run on any Windows-based PC (i.e., Windows 95/98/Me/NT/2000/XP). In this chapter, you'll examine how to package your applications and use the Setup Wizard to add deployment capabilities. So open up that newly finished program of yours and let's walk through the process of creating a finished user product.
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