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Posted

Hi all!!

 

Currently i'm working on VB 6, I guess I am not so pro but pretty advanced programmer....

I want to migrate to VB.NET, my questions are as folow:

 

befor I ask, my system is:

Win2K pro (with Hebrew support), Office XP and VS 6+MSDN

 

1) what do i need to preper preior the installation of VB.NET?

2) Does rollback possible?

3) Will the knoladge of VB6 will help me or do i need to learn every thing all over again?

4) will the projects I already have on VB6 will be usefull in VB.NET?

 

Thanks a lot

a_ofer

  • Leaders
Posted

1) I didn't need to do anything

2) yes, .NET can be run on the same machine side by side with VB6 or VS6

3) it will help, but VB.NET has allot of differences

4) I haven't heard to many good things about the project upgrade wizard and therefore haven't even touched it.

"These Patriot playoff wins are like Ray Charles songs, Nantucket sunsets, and hot fudge sundaes. Each one is better than the last." - Dan Shaughnessy
  • *Experts*
Posted (edited)

Some more answers, from another point of view...

 

1) You actually need the .NET Framework SDK, but this is done

automatically in the VS.NET install. Make sure you have plenty of

HD space, as the install can be huge with all the help files and

such.

 

2) You can't convert VB.NET projects to VB6, but the programs

coexist peacefully.

 

3) A bit

 

4) If you have ActiveX DLL's and controls, you can use them on

Windows forms by referencing them in the project via COM.

Edited by Bucky

"Being grown up isn't half as fun as growing up

These are the best days of our lives"

-The Ataris, In This Diary

  • *Experts*
Posted

One more note...

 

1. You'll likely have to run the Windows Component Update, usually provided as a separate CD/DVD. When you pop in the .NET disk, it will tell you what you have to do first.

 

2. You can uninstall .NET, but I don't know how much I'd trust it (what it leaves behind...). As others said, they co-exist just fine so an uninstall would only gain you your Hard Drive space.

 

3. Knowing the syntax of the language will help a tiny bit, to get your feet wet. Other than that, everything is new (objects, forms, etc. etc.).

 

4. I wouldn't count on the wizard too much. If your project is anything above a student-assignment, I wouldn't trust it. Actually, I wouldn't even trust it to convert a simple school assignment :)

 

-ner

"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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