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Survey Results

Should Microsoft continue developing non-.NET VB?   [Edit]

Survey period: 4 Apr 2005 to 10 Apr 2005

Should Microsoft provide an unmanaged (in the .NET sense) version of Visual Basic analogous to Visual C++?

OptionVotes% 
Yes34521.43
No65540.68
I don't know654.04
I don't care54533.85



 
GeneralRe: Technical justification? Pin
Davy Mitchell5-Apr-05 0:14
Davy Mitchell5-Apr-05 0:14 
GeneralRe: Technical justification? Pin
Gavin Greig5-Apr-05 0:41
Gavin Greig5-Apr-05 0:41 
GeneralRe: Technical justification? Pin
Davy Mitchell5-Apr-05 0:59
Davy Mitchell5-Apr-05 0:59 
GeneralRe: Technical justification? Pin
Ray Cassick7-Apr-05 7:24
Ray Cassick7-Apr-05 7:24 
GeneralRe: Technical justification? Pin
TBQ7-Apr-05 22:13
TBQ7-Apr-05 22:13 
GeneralRe: Technical justification? Pin
Kevin McFarlane8-Apr-05 12:01
Kevin McFarlane8-Apr-05 12:01 
GeneralI voted Yes Pin
Nish Nishant4-Apr-05 0:41
sitebuilderNish Nishant4-Apr-05 0:41 
GeneralThe problem isn't the .NET framework... Pin
Daniel Turini4-Apr-05 2:22
Daniel Turini4-Apr-05 2:22 
Most VBers are used to the need of a runtime to run their programs. Most of them really don't care if their code is managed or unmanaged and don't know the difference between generational garbage collection to reference counting. What is really annoying to them is that the new language is incompatible with the old one. And there's ADO.
IMHO, the migration tool does a good work and puts you 95% there. The major problem is with ADO. If someone ports ADO classic for .NET (you see, I'm not saying ADO.NET), most of VBers would settle down. I know they can use interop to call ADO, but it's half a truth. The .NET GC (in 1.1) isn't capable of adding memory pressure to pointers, so ADO connections and recordsets live for a long time in .NET world, compared to VB6. While some say you can use interop, in practice this is unusable, as the memory use and the number of connections grow very quickly.
Solving that, only those who have code that is too messy or uncapable of (un)learning a couple of keywords would complain. To these, VB6 is still a good solution.


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GeneralRe: The problem isn't the .NET framework... Pin
Grimolfr4-Apr-05 4:51
Grimolfr4-Apr-05 4:51 
GeneralRe: The problem isn't the .NET framework... Pin
aerospaceboy6-Apr-05 16:19
aerospaceboy6-Apr-05 16:19 
GeneralRe: The problem isn't the .NET framework... Pin
NormDroid7-Apr-05 3:04
professionalNormDroid7-Apr-05 3:04 
GeneralRe: The problem isn't the .NET framework... Pin
Ray Cassick7-Apr-05 7:21
Ray Cassick7-Apr-05 7:21 
GeneralRe: The problem isn't the .NET framework... Pin
Grimolfr11-Apr-05 5:21
Grimolfr11-Apr-05 5:21 
GeneralUrm? Pin
Bob Stanneveld3-Apr-05 20:46
Bob Stanneveld3-Apr-05 20:46 

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