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Which language to use (classes)?
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To
24/06/2009 19:03:14
John Baird
Coatesville, Pennsylvania, United States
General information
Forum:
ASP.NET
Category:
Other
Environment versions
Environment:
C# 3.0
OS:
Windows XP
Network:
Windows 2003 Server
Database:
MS SQL Server
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
01407885
Message ID:
01408276
Views:
61
>>>Indeed. It makes me feel a little afraid to ask questions.
>>
>>I agree. And I really wanted to read about what people thought on this issue. Looks like getting something of value has been completely sidetracked by Mr. MVP.
>
>The whole question was NOT ABOUT asking questions for help, it was about asking 200 questions on everything from:
>
>What to name my methods

Without asking this question here I would probably name them as I originally planned (and then suggested by Boris) and would not come up to the nice idea born in discussion with everyone and Hugo.

>How to use a data layer

In the application you used in your blog as a sample you used TableAdapters. I learned the hard way this is not a thing you should use. I'm wondering why did you use them then if you knew the pitfalls?

>how to......
>
>each of which could have been answered by a little research instead of relying on every one else to guide you every step of the way.
>

I've done some research on these questions too as well.

My way of learning is to have a productive discussion. It usually stimulates the thought, provides new ideas which I may have not come up on my own, etc.

I thought that from some of my questions others can benefit too. Say, the latest question about design-time resize. There are many experts on this site, but it took several days before the real solution was suggested. How do you think I would be able to find this?

May be some of the questions should have been easily answered by googling, but you should know what to google first in order to google. Few problems I resolved myself (either by googling, or trying something, or asking for help of a developer here).

In any case, as I said, I do like discussing problems - putting the problem in writing makes you think more and sometimes the solutions even come once you wrote the problem and re-read it.


>If you have concerns, ask away, I'm sure it won't take 200 questions for you to figure it out.
>
>Mr MVP

Well, you may not know how many questions would it take to get the problem resolved.
If it's not broken, fix it until it is.


My Blog
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