Level Extreme platform
Subscription
Corporate profile
Products & Services
Support
Legal
Français
Visual Studio or .NET?
Message
From
23/01/2001 11:57:32
 
 
To
23/01/2001 09:07:40
General information
Forum:
Visual FoxPro
Category:
Other
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
00467045
Message ID:
00467389
Views:
16
I would agree with most of your assessment (and include XML) except maybe "stay away from Microsoft altogether and learn Oracle, Java and C++ " line. Not to say these technology isn't "hot" or will be great additions to anyone's resume, I think it would be very tough to find employment with companies w/o solid education/experience in the field. In addition, it'll definely take longer to "master" or be proficient enough to be productive.

In terms of VFP I agree with you completely. Having been almost exclusively FP/VFP programmer (skipping DBIII+ and Clipper and few others I "played" with) for past 11 years, I've moved almost complete off to VB/ASP/MSSQL. I only use VFP now for "legacy" maintenance and as a utility tool (e.g. import/export, parsing, reporting, etc.)

The future of programming I think will be this:

1. Java (especially for non-Windows or M$ programming)
2. C# (almost exclusively Windows/M$ programming)

Knowledge of one or both will be minimum requirement. One the positive side, at the both languages have similar C/C++ syntax for easier learning.

Thanks!

>Learn VB6, ASP and SQL Server (HTML is a must, of course). If you become experienced with ASP (Active Server Pages) you'll get to know VBScript and JavaScript, both very widely used scripting languages (JavaScript by the way is read by any worthwhile browser).
>
>.NET is still in the making and it still remains to be seen whether it will take the development world by storm or just create a bunch of hot air. Honestly, there are some things about .NET that I don't like the sound of (Web Forms for one - sounds too much like those heinous design time controls in Visual InterDev but that's another rant).
>
>In terms of VFP, it is a niche market. There aren't a lot of opportunities for VFP developers involved with NEW development. I don't think you'll have a problem finding VFP jobs, but they tend to be more maintenance oriented (unless you're working with West Wind WebConnect - try Datek Online). I say this from my own personal experience. My last 4 jobs were VFP and every single one of them involved maintaining an existing app or working on an upgrade. When I switched to VB/ASP/SQL I immediatly found a job doing what I love - new development. I love VFP but the work using VFP right now in the Boston area is not as rewarding. I am still doing VFP work for a client (and even development a new mini-app for them) but that is the exception.
>
>In terms of being "hot" on the market, probably the best way is to stay away from Microsoft altogether and learn Oracle, Java and C++ but I'm assuming that you don't have an entire lifetime to spend in training.
>
>Good luck!
>
>-JT
It's "my" world. You're just living in it.
Previous
Next
Reply
Map
View

Click here to load this message in the networking platform