So...
Do I have to do many change in my project when I change from Visual Studio
2008 to Visual Studio 2010?
What Are the diferences between framework 3.0, framework 3.5 and
framework4.0??

On Tue, Feb 16, 2010 at 9:55 AM, Cesare Imperiali <
[email protected]> wrote:

> agree, as long as you do not expect to go too long to the past...or we
> all would have to learn assembly, first...
>
> 2010/2/13 Cerebrus <[email protected]>:
> > That would be a logical choice... except for one thing - When you have
> > seen a few versions of the framework pass by, you understand how the
> > "new" features in each version have evolved from previous features.
> > (For instance, the evolution of delegates in C#)
> >
> > This conceptual understanding makes a developer exceptional. Although
> > it is quite possible to find a book or tutorial on C# 3.5 that details
> > this particular aspect, it would be rare indeed.
> >
> > On Feb 13, 5:10 am, Cimpy <[email protected]> wrote:
> >> I do not agree with others. I would go with last stable version
> >> (framework 3.5, using visual studio 2008) or the candidate new (visual
> >> studio 2010, But you will find less examples and articles, and those
> >> that you can find might need changes in the final release) for  reason
> >> that if it were true that it does not matter when you go after c#,
> >> then get the last, and in case you could always decide to step back if
> >> you need. By the way, it is not true "it is the same", unless  you
> >> work outside Visual Studio Ide: the integrated developement
> >> environment is grown up, and things are both a little bit easier and
> >> more numerous than before...
> >
>



-- 
Eder Sousa
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