Craig Edmonds I had to learn asp.net the same way that I learned asp... print out large articles and then read them late at night while taking a nice hot bath... and expect to do this for at least 10, 20, or 30+ times! The differences and updates are so profound that it is almost like learning something totally new.
But I wouldn't say that it is too late! One of the first things to decide is whether you are going to use Visual Studio as your IDE, or some type of "text editor" environment. I highly recommend using Visual Studio. If the $1000 price tag is a problem, remember that you can actually buy Visual Basic.Net or C#.Net separately at a fraction of the cost of the full visual studio. This "IDE" choice really make a huge difference in your strategies. And Visual Studio's intellisense, and tool tips, and "F1" help can't be beat. It is nice to be able to click F1 on a keyword and get immediate MSDN help. (we should probably stop here since we are now so far off topic) Rob McEwen PowerView Systems [EMAIL PROTECTED] _______________________________________________ http://lists.clamav.net/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/clamav-win32
