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Go to school and learn something more productive to your career.
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Do u know C Programming? If not you should learn it first.
B2C
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It seems that your teacher has choosen badly the pupil for the task.
If the Lord God Almighty had consulted me before embarking upon the Creation, I would have recommended something simpler.
-- Alfonso the Wise, 13th Century King of Castile.
This is going on my arrogant assumptions. You may have a superb reason why I'm completely wrong.
-- Iain Clarke
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hi all
i have table which conatins following values
col1 | col2 | col3
----- |--------|----------
11 | 1 | 66
77 | 2 | 22
22 | 3 | 22
33 | 4 | 19
now suppose i said sort col1 in asc order the reult should be like this
col1 | col2 | col3
----- |--------|----------
11 | 1 | 66
22 | 3 | 22
33 | 4 | 19
77 | 2 | 22
that is col1's eash row is key and on its position all others colom row should get shifted
plz tell me how can i do this in c#
Thank and Regards
Mukesh.
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You could probably do it with common sense. Oh wait...
Nobody can give you wiser advice than yourself. - Cicero
.·´¯`·->Rajesh<-·´¯`·.
Codeproject.com: Visual C++ MVP
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Rajesh R Subramanian wrote: common sense
Tell him more about it and he would be grateful to you if you could guide its availability, pricing and other relevant details.
Vasudevan Deepak Kumar
Personal Homepage Tech Gossips
A pessimist sees only the dark side of the clouds, and mopes; a philosopher sees both sides, and shrugs; an optimist doesn't see the clouds at all - he's walking on them. --Leonard Louis Levinson
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First C next every thing...no doubt first we need to go with alphabets before going to words sentences paragraphs pages and even books in the same way we need to be familiar even with the middle level language C...every thing is next..
S. Naveen kumar
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I agree absolutely with you.
At first, when I didn't know programming, but wanting to learn, I began with Visual Basic (6.0) ... if I remember well. It was very difficult to me because, well, mainly because I was just 12 years old and I didn't know algorithms nor programming guides. So it was a failure.
So I decided to began with C, because I saw it as the most elementary and powerful language, and a solid base to continue on learning other languages in future. Then, when I had already learned C, it would have been like Programming would have appeared clearly in front of me. When I was to starting to learn a new language, it was easy to me to learn, thing that wouldn't have been the same way easy having other language as starting point that wouldn't have been C.
And ... now I'm here, already programming good code, in C, C#, C++ and Java, and just four years after, being 16.
So, I think, a procedural language as C is the best starting point and the most solid base to learn programming (even without having learned algorithms, and learning in a self-teaching manner as I did) and more complex paradigms after (like OOP, Generic, etc.)
-- Sorry for my bad english, it's not my native language and I'm learning. --
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Your progress is impressing, but "good code" is VERY relative claim. Most of 'really' good programmers
periodically change their opinions from
"i'm really cool programmer"
to
"ah! i do know nothing about programming ... my code isn't even close to ideal".
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I do agree. Well if its for newbies C is the language. Assembly could be good to learn all the basics but the complexity behind that basics may make the beginner loose his interests in programming. To learn programming you must have an aptitude for it. C is not that difficult to learn and playing around with it helps build that aptitude.
So go for C.
Sourya
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BASIC (ZX-Spectrum)
QBasic
VB5
VB6
C++
C++\CLI
C#, VB .NET, VBScript
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mine
C
C++
JAVA
VB5
VB .Net
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Before moving to object oriented programming, you should be well aware of the structural programming.
C will provide the core concepts without it is difficult to get concept behind the scene in OOPs.
You may easily go very fast in high level languages but very soon you will feel helpless if you don't have core concepts.
So, according to me, you should start with middle level language like C.
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I actually agree with you, but when I was a C Instructor at a private college I found that a lot of students failed to comprehend the differences between procedural and object oriented programming.
Having said that I should also mention that a lot of these students moved away from IT after finishing their respective courses.
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kraft wrote: How I can control all elements on the web page using WebBrowser?
You ought to learn controlling yourself from crop-dusting the forum with irrelevant sh*t and choose an appropriate forum for your query. When you learn this by introspection, the web browser control would automatically listen to you.
Vasudevan Deepak Kumar
Personal Homepage Tech Gossips
A pessimist sees only the dark side of the clouds, and mopes; a philosopher sees both sides, and shrugs; an optimist doesn't see the clouds at all - he's walking on them. --Leonard Louis Levinson
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I deleted the message because I posted in a wrong section! Sorry!
The reply it's so philosophical ...
"Sh*t" and "introspection" together! So smart!
Vasudevan Deepak Kumar: learn to make a normal reply, please! If you don't know how, learn! It's not such difficult, believe me! A nice day !
http://www.kraftwin.blogspot.com
modified on Thursday, April 10, 2008 7:30 PM
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Nah, whenever you come across a misposted item it is the bound duty of all CPians to dump on it, try doing that in the lounge if you want to see some real vitriol
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"some real vitriol" say? I think you make a wrong reply, man!
It's happen to post a message in the wrong section! Ok, my mistake, but the guy use a wrong words! I'm not a beginner kid or something and in the past I was myself moderator on some forums! So it is not the case to teach me someone how and what work things in that area !
The guy make an inappropriate reply, that's all! It's so simple! It's so hard to understand? I hope not!
http://www.kraftwin.blogspot.com
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Basic (BBC Micro)
GWBasic
Pascal
Scheme
C++
Prolog
Visual C++
Java
Visual Basic (Yes after I learned C++, I spent time and effort learning VB for fun )
C#/VB.NET
Objective C (Currently Learning)
I think one should start with one functional and one procedural language. I definitely recommend C++ over Java and C# (when starting). Reason is simple person who comes from C\C++ background is generally more conscious about resource utilization (memory, file handles, database connections) then a person who starts with Java or C#. A functional programming language is good because it offers one a different way to tackle problems using a different thinking pattern to solve a problem. All this help overall in making of a good programmer.
You have, what I would term, a very formal turn of phrase not seen in these isles since the old King passed from this world to the next. martin_hughes on VDK
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Rama Krishna Vavilala wrote: (Yes after I learned C++, I spent time and effort learning VB for fun
Same here, except it was not for fun - a client required VB, so I learned it
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Agree with Rama, for start i recommend using c/c++. After that, you can learn whatever you want, and have a hug reference resource to improve yourself. But language is just language, truly know about os, framework v.v.., thing that goes behind will improve your work.
ktmt's member.
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My route:
C
FORTRAN
C++
Java (Dumped it half way through)
Win32
VB (Dumped it in about 3 days)
Visual C++/MFC
C# (Dumped it in 6 months)
Now, living with C++ and occasional MFC.
Nobody can give you wiser advice than yourself. - Cicero
.·´¯`·->Rajesh<-·´¯`·.
Codeproject.com: Visual C++ MVP
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The best option is to start learning both Assembly and Basic AND C/C++ for different reasons.
- Assembly so as to learn the basics on how computer's inner workings...work and
- Basic so as to begin assembling your firts big programs that actually do something useful or entertaining.
- C++ so as to learn the basics of OOP and start getting into serious programming...
I strongly believe that ALL THREE above languages are required so that the novice learns good programming.
And something last: One should NOT FEAR Assembly because it is complicated or too low level. Just start studying it!
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The problem you have these days is that people want to jump in and just create highly visible programs to look cool when creating big (on screen) applications with as little code as possible.
I see myself as "old school" when it comes to development. You have to understand what you are using (hardware and software) before using it.
I find that most people shy away from coding and rather use clicking and dragging for development
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