Come on Valery. I'm sure you have enough room left on your website for a
list like that ...

-- Henkk ;-);-)

----- Original Message -----
From: "Valery Pryamikov" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, April 25, 2002 10:26 AM
Subject: Re: [DOTNET] Difference between C# and VB.NET


> Hi,
> Searching list archives [1] for:
>
> VB and C and language and ( difference or better )
>
> Gives a list of 506 articles with most of them related to subj. Tons of
> pro and cons for each particular language could be found there. And now
> the question:
> Is there someone who would take a challenge to go through all these
> articles, pick the most relevant of them and put some kind of
> article/overview (with links) on the web?
>
> -Valery.
>
> [1] http://discuss.develop.com
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Steven Fraser [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Thursday, April 25, 2002 10:22 AM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: [DOTNET] Difference between C# and VB.NET
>
> I'm trying to make as strong a case as possible for going with c# rather
> than VB.NET for a project.
>
> If anything, with C# you don't have to type as much.
>
> Anyway thanks for the comments. Especially that interview piece.
> Regards,
>              Steven Fraser
>
> The views expressed here are mine and not those of my employer
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Richard Birkby [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: 25 April 2002 09:11
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: [DOTNET] Difference between C# and VB.NET
>
>
> Here you go (slightly biased!):
>
> VB                                              C#
> ========================================================================
> ====
> ======
> Write late bound code easily
>                                                 Incremental compilation
>                                                 XML Comments
>                                                 Less buggy (more testing
> was carried out)
>                                                 Formally standardized
> (ie good documentation)
> Parameterized Properties
> Exception filtering                     Only has standard exception
> handling
> The neat "Handles" keyword
> Able to write VS.Net Add-ins
>                                                 More performance*
>                                                 Operator Overloading
>
>
> Quotations:
>
> "Just as C is the language of Windows, C# is the language of .NET."
> Dr GUI.Net #0, November 2000
>
>
> "When asked who Microsoft sees as the developer audience for VB, the
> answers
> were enlightening. Treadwell characterized developers as coming from two
> camps, those who would approach the problem of writing a tic-tac-toe
> game by
> drawing the UI first (VB developers) and those who would first create
> the
> classes and code required for the game logic ("computer science"
> developers). The interviewees said that Microsoft would make further
> alterations to VB to help target that entry-level audience.
> Unfortunately,
> no one would comment on exactly what such alterations might entail. So
> despite the relative parity that VB.NET has achieved within the .NET
> language family, it's still seen, internally, as the "entry-level"
> language"
> Anders Hejlsberg, David Treadwell, and Prashant Sridharan, Devx.com
> interview, Feb 2002
>
>
>
> Richard
> * Try to ILDASM the following:
>
> Dim s As System.String
> s="hello"
> If s="" Then
> End If
>
> You can read messages from the DOTNET archive, unsubscribe from DOTNET, or
> subscribe to other DevelopMentor lists at http://discuss.develop.com.
>

You can read messages from the DOTNET archive, unsubscribe from DOTNET, or
subscribe to other DevelopMentor lists at http://discuss.develop.com.

Reply via email to