of the client we have did not want to use CF so I slowly moved towards ASP,
PERL, PHP and now everyone wants to use .NET. I really think its the way to
go. You can do everything with the language you are comfortable with C++,
C#, VB, ASP, J++ all in the same IDE using the same framework! I think its
smart. Can't wait to see MS new OS code named Longhorn I believe. Its going
to use a new GUI element called Sparkle.
Hmmm, I wonder what that will do for the GUI? I know what it is going to do.
But I'm sure you can guess what it will do and you know it will be part of
the .NET framework.
Shawn Regan
-----Original Message-----
From: Smith, Matthew P -CONT(CSC) [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, March 08, 2004 10:59 AM
To: CF-Community
Subject: RE: Dot.net stuff
I just had 3 weeks of training on it, and was very impressed with the
environment Visual Studio and the framework provide. I plan on doing much
of my new work in it as well, as our shop is slowly migrating completely
over the .net from cf. We will still be doing maintenance and a little new
work here and there in cf, but .net is the horse that rocks the rocking
horse house, or something.
I'm not saying one is better than the other for everyone, but I know what I
prefer. To each his own, eh?
Matthew
-----Original Message-----
From: Marlon Moyer [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, March 08, 2004 9:36 AM
To: CF-Community
Subject: Dot.net stuff
I went to a dot.net seminar on Friday. I've got to admit that a lot of the
stuff dot.net has to offer is pretty tempting. I was creating a wish list
for CFMX as I was listening to the presenter. I started thinking, I've been
doing cf dev for about 6 years and I know the strengths and weaknesses of
the language fairly well by now. How long will it take to learn the same in
dot.net. One of the major things to know about a language is all of the
"gotcha's", like the locking issues from cf5, the issues with CFC addresses,
structcopy vs duplicate,etc. You can sit and be wowed by the presenter at
the seminar, but what's he hiding about the weaknesses of the language.
I'm the only holdout in my all Microsoft office right now. I'm melancholy
about changing development platforms because I hold out hope that one day
we'll see that being 100% Microsoft may not be the most intelligent thing to
do. I don't hold much hope for Mono. It will be nice that the vb guy and I
can share "solutions" and have different projects in there, but then again
the vb guy doesn't have much idea about oop and doesn't seem to want to
change his programming style.
Arrrgh. I'm going to have to start giving up a bunch of free time to learn
this.
This rambling message brought to you by:
Marlon
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