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Aug 15th, 2001, 12:53 AM
#1
Thread Starter
New Member
java bye-bye!!!
I heard microsoft is closing support forjava.
WHy??
I personally think that microsoft is doing so to promote its own version of java under the name c#. C# is similar to java in many ways.
SO any way, for now, is java going bye-bye
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Aug 15th, 2001, 09:06 AM
#2
Member
Java is made by Sun. Don't use MS Java, because they are trying to make it more Windows-proprietary. And don't use C#, because no sane professional does.
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Aug 15th, 2001, 10:16 AM
#3
Fanatic Member
Agreed!!!!
Sun isn't going away, so neither is Java!
GWDASH
[b]VB6, Perl, ASP, HTML, JavaScript, VBScript, SQL, C, C++, Linux , Java, PHP, MySQL, XML[b]
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Aug 16th, 2001, 12:27 PM
#4
Hyperactive Member
Hey Filburt is there somewhere I can know more about programmer's opinions on C#?
Top Tip: You can make friends and impress the opposite sex at geeky cocktail parties by saying "DB" instead of database. - Karl Moore
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Aug 16th, 2001, 03:16 PM
#5
Member
Originally posted by Radames
Hey Filburt is there somewhere I can know more about programmer's opinions on C#?
I seriously wouldn't use it. Not that many people do and it is just a non-crossplatform version of Java.
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Aug 16th, 2001, 03:33 PM
#6
Dazed Member
Microsoft is just trying to acquire market share with their new "multiplatform language" C#. I dont think we are going to see Java going anywhere anytime soon. What Microsoft is trying to do is a good thing. It is a natural progression for any language
to include these features:
The modern design of C# eliminates the most common C++ programming errors. For example:
Garbage collection relieves the programmer of the burden of manual memory management.
Variables in C# are automatically initialized by the environment.
Variables are type-safe.
I think one of Javas weak points lies within it IDE. Minimum memory requirments are 128Mb ram. So just to get FORTE up and
running it takes too long. Plus i have yet to see a fast and painless way to efficiently bundle and deploy an application written in Java. Such as like Visual Basic has.
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Aug 16th, 2001, 03:42 PM
#7
Member
It's called InstallAnywhere.
Did you attend JavaOne this summer? Java is taking off.
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