Programming
Jun. 6th, 2003 04:22 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Well, the subject line has probably gotten rid of most of you, and this next line will almost certainly get rid of the rest.
I'm learning C#.
Right, now I've got this journal to myself (and boy, does it feel spacious without anyone else here), I'll explain why (to myself, obviously).
I've been meaning to get back into programming again, but the little bits of dabbling I've done have largely been hampered by the fact that I've not really had any projects I've been that interested in. Not only that, but I'm very, very bored of doing low level work - writing yet another bit of code to deal with files, or fiddling about with endless calls to do the simplest interaction with the outside world just doesn't interest me any more.
Also, having been programming in COBOL for the last 9 months, and having always been envious of the Visual Studio IDE when I was working in VFP (it's a fantastic IDE and does all sorts of things that are just smooooth), I thought I should work with something in that.
I can't be arsed doing garbage collection, and I wanted something that would allow me to easily write/read web services. Which leaves C#, which (by sheer coincidence) has the nicest IDE of the entire of VS.NET.
I've been working my way through Visual Studio.NET Step by Step, which has so far been very good. I've only spent a few hours on it so far, and am about 40 pages in, but the power of the system is already very apparent. The fact that I can great a GUI interface by dragging and dropping a few textboxes onto a form, then go into the code behind the form, alter the position of the items in the code-based declaration and then go back to the screen to find it's automatically updated itself is something I would have killed for a few years ago.
The XML commenting system, the collapsible procedure view, the fact that the compiler messages are actually useful and the intellisense basically make this the best environment I've ever worked in. Erin's away for the weekend and I have to say I'm looking forward to spending most of it in front of the computer, typing away.
I'm learning C#.
Right, now I've got this journal to myself (and boy, does it feel spacious without anyone else here), I'll explain why (to myself, obviously).
I've been meaning to get back into programming again, but the little bits of dabbling I've done have largely been hampered by the fact that I've not really had any projects I've been that interested in. Not only that, but I'm very, very bored of doing low level work - writing yet another bit of code to deal with files, or fiddling about with endless calls to do the simplest interaction with the outside world just doesn't interest me any more.
Also, having been programming in COBOL for the last 9 months, and having always been envious of the Visual Studio IDE when I was working in VFP (it's a fantastic IDE and does all sorts of things that are just smooooth), I thought I should work with something in that.
I can't be arsed doing garbage collection, and I wanted something that would allow me to easily write/read web services. Which leaves C#, which (by sheer coincidence) has the nicest IDE of the entire of VS.NET.
I've been working my way through Visual Studio.NET Step by Step, which has so far been very good. I've only spent a few hours on it so far, and am about 40 pages in, but the power of the system is already very apparent. The fact that I can great a GUI interface by dragging and dropping a few textboxes onto a form, then go into the code behind the form, alter the position of the items in the code-based declaration and then go back to the screen to find it's automatically updated itself is something I would have killed for a few years ago.
The XML commenting system, the collapsible procedure view, the fact that the compiler messages are actually useful and the intellisense basically make this the best environment I've ever worked in. Erin's away for the weekend and I have to say I'm looking forward to spending most of it in front of the computer, typing away.
no subject
Date: 2003-06-10 01:15 am (UTC)Two words on cost: MSDN Subscription
Actually that doesn't help users (unless they have their own dev dept). Estimate maintenance costs for a year (@£550/day) and scare them.
[applause] thank you, thank you......
(apologies, still pissed from celebrating my birthday...)