Chapter 1. A new language for .NET
Figure 1.1. Resolver One: A full application written in IronPython
Figure 1.2. A slide from a presentation, emphasizing a guiding philosophy of Python
Figure 1.3. How Python code and the IronPython engine fit into the .NET world
Figure 1.4. Generated IronPython code in Visual Studio
Figure 1.5. Using the Windows Forms designer with IronPython Studio running in Visual Studio 2008
Figure 1.6. The Silverlight DLRConsole sample with a Python and Ruby Console
Figure 1.7. The Zen of Python, as enshrined in the Python standard library
Figure 1.8. The IronPython interactive interpreter
Figure 1.9. A Hello World form, shown before the event loop is started
Figure 1.10. Active Hello World form with a button
Chapter 2. Introduction to Python
Figure 2.1. Wing IDE, with its built-in project browser and interactive interpreter, is a great IDE for Python.
Figure 2.2. This Python object pyramid shows some of the Python types. The layers are arranged in approximate order of complexity (from top to bottom).
Figure 2.3. Names bound to objects by assignment statements
Figure 2.4. Function definition, body, and return
Figure 2.5. A class declaration
Figure 2.6. The structure of a Python package on the filesystem
Chapter 3. .NET objects and IronPython
Figure 3.1. An outline of the structure of the .NET framework
Figure 3.2. Example applications showing off a few Windows Forms controls
Figure 3.3. The C# / VB.NET examples for the Form.Text property