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The Future of VFP for Students?
Message
De
24/01/2002 09:56:50
 
Information générale
Forum:
Visual FoxPro
Catégorie:
Autre
Divers
Thread ID:
00608428
Message ID:
00609713
Vues:
19
>For every "industry expert" you can find, I can another to counter this - including myself.
>
>In the windows world, .NET is not facing an uphill battle...
>
>Having said that, in looking at the J2EE model, I don't a significant difference from what has been espoused for the past few years. i.e., nothing new.
>
>First and foremost - I am a windows developer - windows is my platform. How can my development efforts be more productive on the platform. I know this sounds like marketing speak - and FWIW, I suppose it is. But, it is also common sense.
>
>The bottom line is this: .NET is the platform for windows development. All the people here and the the people that primary use VB, VFP, etc are windows developers first and foremost. This is why .NET is the next logical step for VFP developers. VFP provides a way to participate in the platform, but in all material respects, VFP is largely on the outside looking in when it comes to .NET. When you are inside .NET, you get the full benefit of the franchise. This is why I want the OS and the application platform built by the same company. There are economies of scale that could not be realized otherwise. Yes, MS should provide access to third parties - but in no case should the two be split up. I am getting off track here a bit - but it does help to solidify my point of why .NET is the place to be.
>
>In sum - if the platform is Unix, Linux, or something else that is non-windows. In the windows world however, I will choose the platform optimized for that environment in the absense of a compelling reason to choose otherwise.

John,

I fully agree. I think it's a matter of what platform you develop for.

I have a friend who works for a consulting firm (he is in sales) and is always harping on the fact that Java is the only serious development tool (specifically J2EE) and any developer who uses Windows development tools (I honestly don't think he could name one) is not going to make it in the enterprise space. He works in the healthcare division and his world is painted with J2EE. I disagree with his view. I think there will always be a place for Windows developers because it is so ubiqiutious on the desktop and network server (and now web servers).

It's funny - now that I'm doing development with VB/ASP/SQL I find I am getting the same lack of respect among my peers as when I was a VFP developer (I still use VFP some). I was shocked to discover this but now I am not suprised. I guess getting respect from one's friends for what you do isn't all it's cracked up to be. I guess there are some significant areas where MS has fallen short for enterprise apps though in terms of security and scalability so it's no suprise that they're not respected in that development community.

I hope to see these perceptions and the overall market's perceptions change as .NET matures so I will someday get the respect I deserve.

-JT
Jeff Trockman, MCP
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