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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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
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. :)
Agreed!!!!
Sun isn't going away, so neither is Java!
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.Quote:
Originally posted by Radames
Hey Filburt is there somewhere I can know more about programmer's opinions on C#?
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.
It's called InstallAnywhere.
Did you attend JavaOne this summer? Java is taking off.