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Oct 29th, 2001, 01:59 AM
#1
Thread Starter
Frenzied Member
is .NET really that good?
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Oct 29th, 2001, 08:39 AM
#2
Frenzied Member
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Oct 29th, 2001, 12:34 PM
#3
Black Cat
I personally think .Net was designed with MS's profits in mind instead of the needs of the programmers.
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.
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Oct 29th, 2001, 02:04 PM
#4
Thread Starter
Frenzied Member
what really the big diffrencce betwenn VB and VB.NET
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Oct 31st, 2001, 08:42 AM
#5
Fanatic Member
vb.net will be cross-platform (eventually).
It should run on anything.
Its main method of data exchange is XML, which can pass through firewalls and things that will not allow binary data exchange.
You can use (basically) the same language to develop Windows applications and Web based applications.
Program downloads will be a lot smaller - HOWEVER users will also need the Framework, which is quite big. But the Framework will be incuded in future versions of Windows, so eventually all users will have it on their PC's without downloading it.
It uses disconnected data sets, which is cool.
It has (basic) control resizing.
It is true OOP. (Somebody bound to argue with that one).
Main issue seems to be security of compiled code and if it can easily be decompiled. The jury still seems to be out on that one.
Brian
(Fighting with the RightToLeft bugs in VS 2005)
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Oct 31st, 2001, 08:45 AM
#6
Fanatic Member
Originally posted by JoshT
I personally think .Net was designed with MS's profits in mind instead of the needs of the programmers.
Almost everything MS has ever produced has profit in mind. In fact almost everything ANY business has ever produced had profit in mind. But that's what makes the world go round. Even the Amish grow crops and use money.
Brian
(Fighting with the RightToLeft bugs in VS 2005)
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Oct 31st, 2001, 09:37 AM
#7
Black Cat
Yeah, but I mean they're taking it to the extreme here. Read about .Net from a source not aimed at programmers. The definition of .Net will be something like "MS's attempt to compete in the web services market", not "new tool too make life easier for programmers".
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.
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Nov 5th, 2001, 09:56 AM
#8
Hyperactive Member
YES - it's very good. Yum, yum.
That's Mr Mullet to you, you mulletless wonder.
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Nov 11th, 2001, 06:09 PM
#9
New Member
Yes, I think it´s really good, but VB.NET will do what Dephi has been doing since its version 1.0.
Inheritance, polymorphism, etc..
Have you heard about Anders Hejlsberg???
No. He´s the guy who wrote Turbo Pascal and Dephi.
Now he´s working for Microsoft.
What money can do???
Think about it.
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