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Gary Wheeler wrote: Red Bul
Nope. Never drank it. The smell already makes me sick.
Gary Wheeler wrote: Cheetos.
They don't sell them here.
Any other stereotypes we could try?
Long greasy hair? Negative.
Heavy metal shirts? Ok, I still have some.
Programming in the middle of the night? Yes, is there a better time?
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Right. I now earn my money with singing on the street. You can't imagine what they pay me to stop, but recently some have tried to make me sign a paper that prevents me from ever coming back.
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I'm a .net developer since... ever it appeared.
Recently I've been working on a project that involves WCF and JAVA MVC front-end.
So usually I have SQL Management Studio, Visual Studio and Eclipse open all time and keep switching between them.
For me JAVA is more of the same I had as a .net expert. No news, no "WOW I would like to have this on the .net side..."
I just feel JAVA namespaces a bit messy and the Date handling on JAVA is actually a big mess... apart from that all is good and calm
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AlexCode wrote: For me JAVA is more of the same I had as a .net expert. No news, no "WOW I would like to have this on the .net side..."
Colleague of mine who does both .NET and Java tends to use Scala as a "better Java" now. He likes the expressiveness and conciseness. Though, the tooling is not yet on par with that for Java.
For people coming to Java from C# 3 I can see why Scala (in non-functional mode) is more attractive than Java.
Kevin
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Yes, its a great way of getting access to other folk's systems
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Fantastic. You mean the coffee, right?
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