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The Future of VFP for Students?
Message
 
À
25/01/2002 16:53:52
Information générale
Forum:
Visual FoxPro
Catégorie:
Autre
Divers
Thread ID:
00608428
Message ID:
00610861
Vues:
35
David;

Somehow I do not think Microsoft would want me for their .NET marketing team! :)

Tom


>Thomas,
>
>>I have considered the ramifications of using multiple languages to create one .NET project. If this is done, the term “spaghetti code” will take on an entirely new meaning. Who will be the one who will have to debug such an application if something breaks or the application requires attention? How many people will have working knowledge of all languages used in such an instance?
>
>You have just pointed out an important consideration of the very interesting cross-language inheritance of .NET. In practical terms, if you take the approach that, "OK, let's build a development team. We seem to have more VB people around these days, so they can work in VB .NET, but here are few sharp C++ guys. Let's have them do some stuff in C#, and oh yeah, our old Cobol senior citizens can build some of our system, too."
>
>"Since it's all cross-language, we can each inherit from each other on various parts of the system, because it really doesn't matter any more." Until, as you said, you actually have to debug and maintain, perhaps with a different set of developers. There is a lot to be said for narrowing the focus.
>
>I think the most interesting part of cross-language might be in getting pre-built classes from the component market and subclassing them in your language of choice -- which really is what you have with the .NET Framework anyway.
>
>Good discussion...
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