wyrd Posted January 27, 2003 Posted January 27, 2003 I know that VB and C# .NET are 90% identical (syntax aside), but I'm curious.. why aren't there many C# programmers on these forums? Aside from the one C# specific forum, all code in other areas are basically written in VB. After programming in Java for so long and now learning C++ (which is why I've been absent from these forums) I'm starting to find the C# syntax way more likable. I don't know.. just bored and felt like throwing that out there for no reason at all. :-\ Quote Gamer extraordinaire. Programmer wannabe.
Leaders Banjo Posted January 27, 2003 Leaders Posted January 27, 2003 The code is mainly VB because most of the users here have come across from Extreme-VB. Technically you can use any language you like in the non-language specific boards. Quote Those who live by the sword get shot by those who don't!
*Experts* Volte Posted January 27, 2003 *Experts* Posted January 27, 2003 Most of the people here who are fairly well experienced in VB.NET can also help with C#; the languages are nearly identical when you get right down to it. Quote
*Experts* Nerseus Posted January 27, 2003 *Experts* Posted January 27, 2003 I use only C# - read any of my posts and you'll see my apologies at attempting to use VB.NET. I've used VB professionally for about 8 years but liked C# better. Having to learn the assemblies and WinForms (or WebForms) is more than 90% of development - the language is just a means to get everything else working. My company basically took a vote and decided to go C#. Most of us knew JavaScript from our web programming so the syntax wasn't difficult. I like the "strictness" built into C# FAR more than VB's - I was never too keen on all the type coersion going on in VB6. 99% of the time it was convenient, but that 1%... oh, that 1% :) I almost asked the same question on the Language Specific forums - why are there SO many more posts for help with VB.NET than C#. Then I realized what it was: C# programmers are smarter and don't need help :p -Nerseus Quote "I want to stand as close to the edge as I can without going over. Out on the edge you see all the kinds of things you can't see from the center." - Kurt Vonnegut
wyrd Posted January 28, 2003 Author Posted January 28, 2003 Then I realized what it was: C# programmers are smarter and don't need help LMAO! :D Quote Gamer extraordinaire. Programmer wannabe.
*Gurus* divil Posted January 28, 2003 *Gurus* Posted January 28, 2003 I expect there to be more and more C# questions asked as more and more search engines find the site. A lot of people are still finding this site through the VB forum which is why we're getting more VB.NET questions than C#. Saying that, very few questions are really syntax specific. If I see a poster is working with C#, I'll try and give a C# answer. Quote MVP, Visual Developer - .NET Now you see why evil will always triumph - because good is dumb. My free .NET Windows Forms Controls and Articles
PhilBayley Posted January 28, 2003 Posted January 28, 2003 I dont know about anyone else but c# is far more intuitive than vb (but then again I come from a c++ background). I am V. dissapointed though, as the whole .NET philosophy takes away some of the clever stuff that kinda made a C++ programmer worth his money. It is far easier to do things now than ever before. I actually feel more like a vb programmer than a c++ one ** Oh No I may forget what real code is !!! ** :D Quote
*Experts* Nerseus Posted January 28, 2003 *Experts* Posted January 28, 2003 Real code is code that runs as expected with no errors - the only kind the users care about - they don't care what language was used. Waxing nostalgic here... I loved VB3. It was fast, easy, did everything it needed to. It sucked for making installs - DLL hell was a pain, but the abundance of 3rd party controls was just fuuuun. Don't get me wrong, there's not enough money in the world to make me go back to touch any code I wrote 8 years ago in VB3, but I loved it :) -Nerseus Quote "I want to stand as close to the edge as I can without going over. Out on the edge you see all the kinds of things you can't see from the center." - Kurt Vonnegut
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