Looking at data like http://langpop.corger.nl it seems like c# is alive and well. Java, PHP and JS are really the only languages of similar popularity. I imagine JS will probably pull ahead as more stuff goes to node, or server-side presentation logic moves to the client.
Joseph On Sep 19, 2014 10:15 AM, "William Luu" <will....@gmail.com> wrote: > Tech moves quickly. > > But C# is far from "legacy", it is a mature, yet still evolving language. > > C# 6 is coming - http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/magazine/dn683793.aspx > and > http://roslyn.codeplex.com/wikipage?title=CSharp%20Language%20Design%20Notes&referringTitle=Documentation > And some short videos on it - > https://www.wintellectnow.com/course/detail/what-s-new-in-c-6-visual-basic-dotnet-14-and-visual-studio-14 > > > > > On 19 September 2014 10:01, Bec Carter <bec.usern...@gmail.com> wrote: > >> Just the other day a friend of mine mentioned how at a meeting with the >> big guns at her office they were referring to C# as "legacy". Am I now the >> new VB6 equivalent? Noooooooooooooooooooo. Help. >> >> >> On Thu, Sep 18, 2014 at 10:00 AM, Greg Keogh <g...@mira.net> wrote: >> >>> Awfully quiet on here. Have people left? >>>> >>> >>> Indeed I was thinking that in recent weeks. Either .NET is obsolete and >>> no one wants to talk about it, or after a decade in the group everyone is >>> now a ninja guru and have no questions. >>> >>> >>>> Anyway anybody have a surface pro 3? Thoughts so far? Ok for dev work? >>>> >>> >>> No surface, however I was going to take my wife's brand new iPad to a >>> meeting today to take notes, but I couldn't even figure out to close a >>> browser window on it, so I'll come back to the idea later. >>> >>> *Greg* >>> >>> >>> >> >