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Thread: Tell me it ain't so

  1. #1
    Jethro
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    Unhappy Tell me it ain't so

    Ok got the vb.net beta one CD on the way. Finally. Er, there is a nasty rumour that when you install the thing, you have to download all sorts of crap from MS.

    Is this true?

  2. #2
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    didnt hear that one yet..
    but if your planning on UNINSTALLING IT
    have fun

    why didnt ya wait for 2?
    your an assuie, that much is expected from you i guess

    we canadians wait for people to go through all the troubles
    then we get a nice n clean beta after other people go through all different sorts of troubles

  3. #3
    Jethro
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    We thought we might get a head start on it. You know learn all the things in 1 that wont be in 2 or any of the release candidates.

  4. #4
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    i have a lot of friends of mine that installed it
    its SLOW and its buggy
    i usually jump on these things and get started on them right away
    but as you said
    a LOT of things that they put in beta one are not even gonna show up in the next beta, so no point

    but i tell you, i played with it a little
    it REALLY will change the way we program

    one thing i like the most is collapse and open of procedures and fuctions AND you can write macros to have IDE obey you
    just love it

    so i cant wait til 2 is released

  5. #5
    Jethro
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    The demos we have seen rock!!!!

    But hey it probably doesn't have as many bugs as the one they actually release.

    If you hear an explosion of swearing over the weekend, it's us trying to install

  6. #6
    Monday Morning Lunatic parksie's Avatar
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    I like it. Dead simple to program for, even in C++, and that garbage collection kicks Java any day.
    I refuse to tie my hands behind my back and hear somebody say "Bend Over, Boy, Because You Have It Coming To You".
    -- Linus Torvalds

  7. #7
    Jethro
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    Still "Fanatic" how many more posts do you need.

  8. #8
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    i just cant WAIT to write one macro i want so bad..

    you know how in vb, the project explorer shows all your forms..
    well to find a method in a form
    click the project explorer, find the form, then go in the form searching for the method
    now you can write macros that when you click the form, in a treeview thingy, it shows methods, variables ect as childs to that form
    and you can click it to go directly there

    this is one of the things i wanna write when i get beta 2

  9. #9
    Jethro
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    One of the cool things in Delphi, (hate to admitt it), is that you get this little notepad thingy for each project where you can jot down ideas etc for the project you are working on. Have requested this from MS every show l have been too. You would think this would be an easy ask.

    The macros sound cool, so cool in fact that they will can it from Beta 2.

  10. #10
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    they BETTER NOT
    cus i will be SUPER pissed
    weill with this new macro thingy
    you can write your own notepad believe it or not

    if you look at the actual macro code
    its VB
    so if you can make a notepad in vb
    then you can make one for your projects..
    i am telling you man
    this macro thing is gonna REALLY make it stand out

  11. #11
    Monday Morning Lunatic parksie's Avatar
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    Originally posted by Jethro
    The macros sound cool, so cool in fact that they will can it from Beta 2.


    I like the TODO style error messages, where you can check them off as you fix them
    I refuse to tie my hands behind my back and hear somebody say "Bend Over, Boy, Because You Have It Coming To You".
    -- Linus Torvalds

  12. #12
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    parksie, ohh ya thanks for reminding me
    that was the first thing that made me go "wow ms, i want you, i love you"
    ha ha

    ya that is one COOL feature

  13. #13
    Monday Morning Lunatic parksie's Avatar
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    Huh? Someone agreeing with me? That's never happened before

    Things I like:
    TODO errors
    Customisable samples displayed in docs
    VSI (woo hoo!)
    I love the look of those menus
    I refuse to tie my hands behind my back and hear somebody say "Bend Over, Boy, Because You Have It Coming To You".
    -- Linus Torvalds

  14. #14
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    there is a LOT of COOL things in that thing
    i just wanna see what they put in beta 2

  15. #15
    Jethro
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    Apparently there are going to be quite a few changes for beta 2. Renaming of some functions etc. Forget which, but they dumped something from vb6 that was really cool, the guy noted that the whole room wanted it back. Or it could have been, wanted a beer l forget which.

    The xml support looks awesome. And WEB PAGES

  16. #16
    Monday Morning Lunatic parksie's Avatar
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    I'm not so enthused by XML as everyone else seems to be Am I missing some major point here? It just doesn't seem all that fantastic.
    I refuse to tie my hands behind my back and hear somebody say "Bend Over, Boy, Because You Have It Coming To You".
    -- Linus Torvalds

  17. #17
    Jethro
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    It's a bit hard to explain

    For B2B the best thing since condoms came in ribbed.

    You can post up sales figures etc on a web page, and make your own sections, rather than relying on the sections in HTML. Also most excellent for poking things in and out of unix.

    We are still expeirmenting with it.

  18. #18
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    parksie ever thought of writing something that ANYONE in ANY language would undrestand?

    write something in xml
    all languages undrestand it

  19. #19
    matthewralston
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    I bet it's not compatible with double dutch...that's my second...no...fourth language.

    Huh? What was I talking about...? Don't answer that.

  20. #20
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    Parksie, if you want to get a feeling why XML is having such a major impact on the industry and why it's so great take a look at BizTalk Server. How fast and easy you can integrate businesses/systems.

  21. #21
    Addicted Member ender_pete's Avatar
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    one of my favorites features of .net ( if microsoft can do it )
    is the fact that it will be platform independent.
    you are supposed to be able to build and exe and run it on unix,linux,solaris,mac.. etc..
    you are supposed to be able to import pretty much any language and run it in the .net environment..
    didn't say if you could recompile it though???

    well i guess we will see
    ender_pete
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    xml,dhtml,delphi,c++,vc++,java,cgi,php, python, ada(so ancient) ,adasage(also ancient) and others i can't remember.....

  22. #22
    Monday Morning Lunatic parksie's Avatar
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    That depends on the availability of a port of the .NET framework for the target OS.
    I refuse to tie my hands behind my back and hear somebody say "Bend Over, Boy, Because You Have It Coming To You".
    -- Linus Torvalds

  23. #23
    Addicted Member ender_pete's Avatar
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    i read in a .net beta book that in the final realease there would be options when you build the program of what platform to build it for.

    so you scould select to build an exe for solaris 7.. or build one for
    mac osx...

    but you never know with microsoft...
    ender_pete
    C#,VS.NET Ent Arch, vb6 ee sp5,html,vbscript,jscript,
    xml,dhtml,delphi,c++,vc++,java,cgi,php, python, ada(so ancient) ,adasage(also ancient) and others i can't remember.....

  24. #24
    Jethro
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    Ah would explain the rumours

    Was wondering why they were cutting out all this API call stuff. I mean l don't have a problem with it, great super, no longer have to worry about the stuff. Are you sure they are going to offer multi OS support, and not just DOS/WIndows deployment.

  25. #25
    Black Cat JoshT's Avatar
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    I have trouble believing that MS would implement non-Windows support in such a manner that it would be usable in real-life.
    Josh
    Get these: Mozilla Opera OpenBSD
    I have books for sale: "MCSD in a Nutshell" and "VB Distributed Exam Cram" - PM me for details. Will also trade for a decent ATX Pentium 2 MB/CPU/RAM combo.

  26. #26
    Addicted Member ender_pete's Avatar
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    That is what i read in the .net beta book. Now it isn't in stone that there will be multi OS support.. it's just a feature they are trying to get in there...
    Microsoft is leveraging the power of XML to make it cross platform independent.

    AS for the API's there will still be the ability to use api calls...but
    you really won't need to since most any function you will need will be in the .net runtime..... they combined all of the languages into one runtime so you can import most any library you would need to do api calls

    it's really nice how they did it.....

    but cell see how it turns out in the end....
    ender_pete
    C#,VS.NET Ent Arch, vb6 ee sp5,html,vbscript,jscript,
    xml,dhtml,delphi,c++,vc++,java,cgi,php, python, ada(so ancient) ,adasage(also ancient) and others i can't remember.....

  27. #27
    Jethro
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    Went to another seminar last night on vb.net in Sydney. Ask the guy demonstrating about multiOS support, he didn't know. Mind you he couldn't show us any of the extended ADO features that they keep on about.

    Am hoping for the multi OS deployment option though, as we have an Apple client and you guessed it all C++ work being done, (which l know next to nothing about).

  28. #28
    Addicted Member ender_pete's Avatar
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    I hope so to...
    it would be so sweet...
    I'll try and find that book and see who wrote it see if i can send him some email and get further details....
    ender_pete
    C#,VS.NET Ent Arch, vb6 ee sp5,html,vbscript,jscript,
    xml,dhtml,delphi,c++,vc++,java,cgi,php, python, ada(so ancient) ,adasage(also ancient) and others i can't remember.....

  29. #29
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    The way I understand it from the 2-day course I went on is that your code gets compiled into an Intermediate Language ( IL ) thingy and that this is translated at runtime by the Common Language Runtime. All that is needed to run your code on say a Unix box is the .Net SDK for Unix, which I'm sure someone is working on right now because it'll be worth big money.

    All .Net languages are compiled into this IL, which is why there's no real speed difference between any of them - they're all the same when it comes down to it.

    I think that's right

  30. #30
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    alright, this is what will happen
    according to MS

    they obviously got sick of java
    its slowness n stuff
    so .net was born

    ms's plans are
    since JVM is not optimized for different operating systems and different hardward configurations..
    they decided to take advantage of this

    so here is their plan
    every combination of the cpu chip and os people are running
    they will release a different Runtime DLL
    which will make every one of them optimized
    according to their tests
    c# runs at 40% of c++(WITHOUT this optimization)
    where java runs at 10% of c++
    their plan is to do this optimization thing and boost c# to 80%

    now they are going to release a runtime dll for all combinations
    and thus will give us the ability to write for all plateforms

    from what i heard
    you make ONE .exe
    and it runs on ALL platforms automatically
    if this is true
    then .net is truely GREAT

  31. #31
    Jethro
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    Kovan

    Do you know if the differing OS dlls will ship with vb.net or is the plan to make ya buy them as you need them..

    Am already thinking....

    Apple OS 10
    Linux Redhat 7.0
    Solarius

    This could be huge.

  32. #32
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    i believe they will be free
    just like JVM
    now to license them to use in the operating system for os developers it might cost them HUGE
    but they will be available for download

    this is what i heard
    i dont know what they are going to do with their final release

    but if thats the case
    developing will be EASY

  33. #33
    Jethro
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    The thought of the entirety of the Chit Chat Forum guys let lose on the Apple community is frightening. Expect a number of Apple T-Shirts with blowup sheep on them.

  34. #34
    Monday Morning Lunatic parksie's Avatar
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    One problem...DLLs are only on Windows, so they'd have to find some completely different way of handling it on a non-Windows system. For example, the assembly metadata is stored in the PE header, which ELF programs don't have.
    I refuse to tie my hands behind my back and hear somebody say "Bend Over, Boy, Because You Have It Coming To You".
    -- Linus Torvalds

  35. #35
    old fart Frans C's Avatar
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    The idea is that all .net programs are compiled into Intermediate Language (IL). When the user runs the program, the IL is compiled into native code by a JIT compiler (Just in Time). So all you need is a JIT compiler for the platform you use, and you can run .net programs.
    I don't know if there are plans for creating JIT compilers for non microsoft platforms, but in theory they can be made.

  36. #36
    Monday Morning Lunatic parksie's Avatar
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    You can run the programs themselves, but it'll immediately terminate due to a total lack of system libraries You still need a .NET framework (all the System.xxx namespaces, usually in mscorlib.dll)
    I refuse to tie my hands behind my back and hear somebody say "Bend Over, Boy, Because You Have It Coming To You".
    -- Linus Torvalds

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