Level Extreme platform
Subscription
Corporate profile
Products & Services
Support
Legal
Français
Where is that thread about VFP & .NET?
Message
From
10/03/2005 13:09:35
 
General information
Forum:
Visual FoxPro
Category:
Other
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
00993609
Message ID:
00994530
Views:
25
Yes,

It was an MSDN presentation. I'm not necessarily sure that the differences he disclosed were deal breakers on which language to choose. The updates were based on suggestions by users of the the current product.

I was cleaning up the other day and found my notes from the presentation. The only example I really remember was "Me." in VB.net. I believe this was in VB6 and was requested to add into VB.net. It exposes properties of the client computer. So you can query memory, HD, network extremely easy.

There was a really nice addition to the IDE that displayed a dashed line across the form when you were arranging controls. I think that is only available for C# or VB. But I can't recall which one.

>> But I did attend a presentation on VS 2005 several months ago. The presenter made perfect sense to me when he discussed how the requirements for VS 2003 were to create a stable product, with not too much room for creativity. And that for VS 2005 the 2 teams were presented with a list of requirements for the next release. And each team could come up with their own enhancements beyound that list.
>
>He then went on to show some of the different features that were added to each language. I would expect the differences to become more significant as time goes on. <<
>
>Interesting. Was the presenter from Microsoft? If so, so much for the decision between VB.NET or C#.NET (or whatever other flavor) being just a "lifestyle choice." That is actually one of the things I like about .NET -- code in whatever language you are most comfortable with and pay no performance price because it all generates the same runtime code. To me that was when VB became a fully respectable programming language. Not that it wasn't "respectable" before but it was always recognized that you were paying a performance penalty in return for ease of use. (Plus VB developers had to answer the occasional snide question about what the B in BASIC stands for ;-) ).
>
>Mike

(On an infant's shirt): Already smarter than Bush
Previous
Reply
Map
View

Click here to load this message in the networking platform