Knowledge Upgrade Suggestion !
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Marry Christmas, To All CPians, Around the World. I programmed in C and C++ for about 13 years(from days of Borland C 3) and learn visual C(4, 5, 6, 2000,2003,and little 2005).My intersts are network and system programming. It seems that some refreshment required. I Think two choices are better for me: 1. To complete MFC and WIN32 knowledge. 2. To Learn C# and .Net there is no working restrictions. Any Idea? (Excuse me for my weak Writing) M.Mehrdad.M
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Marry Christmas, To All CPians, Around the World. I programmed in C and C++ for about 13 years(from days of Borland C 3) and learn visual C(4, 5, 6, 2000,2003,and little 2005).My intersts are network and system programming. It seems that some refreshment required. I Think two choices are better for me: 1. To complete MFC and WIN32 knowledge. 2. To Learn C# and .Net there is no working restrictions. Any Idea? (Excuse me for my weak Writing) M.Mehrdad.M
M.Mehrdad.M wrote:
1. To complete MFC and WIN32 knowledge.
It's a sea man...
M.Mehrdad.M wrote:
2. To Learn C# and .Net
It's a bit contrary - C# and Systems Programming Learning new technology is good. But I believe to be proficient in the interested and knowing topics and it's extension. I'm looking to improve my C++ skills by reading articles and new books, some new topics related to C++/CLI. Totally improving the domain knowledge etc.. I'm moving in that way. It's upto you to make a switch or not. Anyway all the best. Go ahead...
-Sarath_._ "Great hopes make everything great possible" - Benjamin Franklin
My blog - Sharing My Thoughts, An Article - Understanding Statepattern
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M.Mehrdad.M wrote:
1. To complete MFC and WIN32 knowledge.
It's a sea man...
M.Mehrdad.M wrote:
2. To Learn C# and .Net
It's a bit contrary - C# and Systems Programming Learning new technology is good. But I believe to be proficient in the interested and knowing topics and it's extension. I'm looking to improve my C++ skills by reading articles and new books, some new topics related to C++/CLI. Totally improving the domain knowledge etc.. I'm moving in that way. It's upto you to make a switch or not. Anyway all the best. Go ahead...
-Sarath_._ "Great hopes make everything great possible" - Benjamin Franklin
My blog - Sharing My Thoughts, An Article - Understanding Statepattern
thanks, Sarath. Your Opinions are very similar to mine.:) Yours, M.Mehrdad.M
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Marry Christmas, To All CPians, Around the World. I programmed in C and C++ for about 13 years(from days of Borland C 3) and learn visual C(4, 5, 6, 2000,2003,and little 2005).My intersts are network and system programming. It seems that some refreshment required. I Think two choices are better for me: 1. To complete MFC and WIN32 knowledge. 2. To Learn C# and .Net there is no working restrictions. Any Idea? (Excuse me for my weak Writing) M.Mehrdad.M
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Marry Christmas, To All CPians, Around the World. I programmed in C and C++ for about 13 years(from days of Borland C 3) and learn visual C(4, 5, 6, 2000,2003,and little 2005).My intersts are network and system programming. It seems that some refreshment required. I Think two choices are better for me: 1. To complete MFC and WIN32 knowledge. 2. To Learn C# and .Net there is no working restrictions. Any Idea? (Excuse me for my weak Writing) M.Mehrdad.M
C# is a great language and .NET is a great platform. I'd give it a try and see how you like it. You can still access with Win32\64 API through C# and use pointers and do things you wouldn't expect from a managed language. I wrote software in C and C++ when I used DOS as my development platform but when I started writing for Windows I found that it was tedious and less enjoyable to program in C or C++. C/C++ is perfect for system programming, but I'd give C# a try just for fun.
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