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I'm mostly paid to work in French, although I wish someone would develop a more regular, easier-to-use version, perhaps calling it F#.
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Or Freedom# for the rednecks.
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How many of you checked more than 5 options?
All Rights Reserved! All Wrongs Revenged!
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Oh, the horror.
I think we need to know the VB6 / VB.NET breakdown so we know how worried we should be.
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i checked VB because it was the closest thing to ASP/VBScript
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Like most of the polls here, all of the appropriate options simply aren't provided.
They should have had VB broken up into at least three separate items - "VB6/earlier", "VB.Net", and "VBScript"
The C++ answer should have also been broken out into "C", "C++ Native", and "C++ managed"
I got a call from a headhunter wanting to talk to me about my PL/1 experience. I didn't think anyone was still programming in PL/1...
"Why don't you tie a kerosene-soaked rag around your ankles so the ants won't climb up and eat your candy ass..." - Dale Earnhardt, 1997 ----- "...the staggering layers of obscenity in your statement make it a work of art on so many levels." - Jason Jystad, 10/26/2001
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I checked VB, but only because we have old VB6 apps that are still in production and still haven't been ported to C# or replaced with a re-write or complete replacement. We still have to maintain it and occasionally tweak some functionality. (Corporate environment, not a software shop.)
Grim (aka Toby) MCDBA, MCSD, MCP+SB
SELECT * FROM users WHERE clue IS NOT NULL
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I was wondering this large population working on C#, are they coding on web side or desktop?
I think most of c# programmers are doing ASP .net for web applications and web sites, or write web services.
I also think that number of desktop application developers using c# is not much larger than C++ or vb programmers. However these are my opinions and might be wrong.
// "Life is very short and is very fragile also." Yanni while (I'm_alive) { cout<<"I love programming."; }
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perhaps what you say it's true but i gotta say that once you've tested c# you do your best for continue using it, if your client allows you, of course
cool signature by the way
c# rocks
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Camilo Sánchez Herrera wrote: once you've tested c# you do your best for continue using it
It depends to the programmer, I think. Many people are as you mentioned, while many others are not.
You see the pole results, after 6 years of .net introduction, there are still more than 40% of programmers not using that at all, and the 56% that use it are probably using other languages as well(otherwise number of voters wouldn't exceed 100%.) I could never believe that 30% still use c++.
Me for example, started and learned a bit of the new technology, specially database (e.g. Dataset, data table, table adapters, Data source, ado.net, n Tier architecture, etc.) and guess what, I don't like it! I returned back to c++ and implemented what I found good in c#. I mostly don't like GUI tools that generate huge code for us, in return I like small codes do a lot and wizards that generate codes that I can read and manipulate easily.
Camilo Sánchez Herrera wrote: cool signature by the way
Thank you
// "Life is very short and is very fragile also." Yanni while (I'm_alive) { cout<<"I love programming."; }
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I must say that my first exprience with C# was for the desktop and for web services. Nowadays it is mostly for the Web... nevertheless, I would rather be doing most of my development on C++ even if designed for .NET
Nothing can replace the power and pleasure of developing with C++
Once more, desktop software should stick to native code, especialy interface development... .NET is a great tool, but it should be used only for what it is best!
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Most of my C# work is 50% desktop and 50% web at the moment. The web-side is growing a little as I move into writing SOA web-services to power my desktop apps.
Michael
Thanks to all for your kind words and support on my return to CP. This place and you guys and gals are just the best
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Michael P Butler wrote: 50% web
Michael P Butler wrote: I move into writing SOA web-services
So it's mostly either writing web services or desktop applications.
I was talking about asp.net web sites. I was reasoning that a large number of those who selected c# are mostly coding asp.net. It's just a theoretical idea, however.
It seems that a large number of projects moved to web side, in US specially, because internet is widely available and also is cheap(I think.) Where I live things are different. Internet is available in some houses(often Dialup) or in some offices(often broad band up to 256K but mostly 128.) Here people don't like to move their application to web because of it's prices and poor quality. But they use it for blogging or introducing products,... The concept of web services, or web based applications or service oriented architecture will not come here soon, however I like technology and learned a bit of them.
// "Life is very short and is very fragile also." Yanni while (I'm_alive) { cout<<"I love programming."; }
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Hi i am doing my MSC project and i need to write a programme in C to one a comm port to send and receive data can anyone help me out i am new to C programming.
Regards
Temikasali
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If you're new, check this out. There's a lot of articles here, you only need to find the right KEYWORDS and SEARCH. Begin with a short article to understand the basics, then move on further...
http://www.codeproject.com/cs/internet/SerialCommunication.asp[^]
I checked the article, the basics are there. Anyhow, when you implement RS232 communication, you'll have to read a lot of - manual/transfer protocol specification, etc.
BTW: really the wrong forum for questions
C#, ASPX, SQL, novice to NHibernate
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Which languages are you actual paid to work in?
/ravi
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I put English and it didn't show up in the poll.
Hmmmmmmmm... It felt like I was getting ripped off. Guess it's obsolete.
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Emanuelle Goldsteen wrote: Hmmmmmmmm... It felt like I was getting ripped off. Guess it's obsolete.
Maybe you should have put "Canadian"
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It should also say actually instead of actual.
Cheers,
Vıkram.
After all is said and done, much is said and little is done.
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what exactly do people do with it?
any cross platform ('nux/doze) C# developers out there?
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Yes i do cross develop my applications although, i do question why i should write them in C# and not just C++.
In any case, mono is fine to use as a cross development compiler and i have been using it for a while,
even though it has some pretty large bugs but with a bit of knowledge anyone can work around them .
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====i do question why i should write them in C# and not just C++. =====
thats what i wondered, lol.
i use QT, SDL and somesuch...
if yr going to use an interpreter, why not use a good one, like LISP or Python?
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Interpreter? Why are you mentioning C# and interpreters in the same sentence?
/B
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I've been writing a backend server application to automate the test labs at my company, they decided to use C# for that since its capable of multithreading. The other team members use VB.NET which is the web interface.
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