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Microsoft .NET applications for Windows

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  • S starcraft4ever

    Five years have passed with the famous .NET framework and still I didn't see a single application (Client) from Microsoft made in .NET. Is there some application like Calc or Paint or something that MS did in .NET for Windows 2000, XP or Windows Vista? I really would like to see it. I love C#, but sometimes I feel like I’m a guinea pig, how come they advertise like the best platform to develop when them self don't use it? I guess they had the time, money and resources to train people in C#/.NET :)... Why it didn't happen. Also did you see any MS application on Vista using WPF? Sometimes I really wonder myself what's the reason MS it is not using .NET aggressively, and personal I think five years is more enough to come up with some working application, at least I'd like to see a Calc.exe or a Minesweeper distributed from them to make me feel more secure about it before keep going with C# and stop more and more using C++ just for very special things that you can't or are too difficult to do with C#. What do you think about it?

    F Offline
    F Offline
    Frank Kerrigan
    wrote on last edited by
    #6

    Parts of SQL 2005 are .NET I believe.

    Grady Booch: I told Google to their face...what you need is some serious adult supervision. (2007 Turing lecture) http:\\www.frankkerrigan.com

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    • S starcraft4ever

      It could make perfect sense but from where did you get that information. If I open devenv.exe with Reflector.exe it shows that it can't be opened because it doesn't contains a valid CLI header. If I open devenv.exe with Depends.exe it shows me that it doesn't contain any call to MSCOREE.dll as all .NET programs will shows. Of course I’m referring to managed application. Every test I'm doing show me that it is not a .NET application, If it is .NET then why reflector.exe and depends.exe shows that?

      N Offline
      N Offline
      Nirosh
      wrote on last edited by
      #7

      Administrative Tools\Microsoft .NET Framework X Configuration

      L.W.C. Nirosh. Colombo, Sri Lanka.

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      • B Bradml

        Paint .Net[^] used to be an MS project, but it was X'd.


        Brad Australian - Captain See Sharp on "Religion" any half intelligent person can come to the conclusion that pink unicorns do not exist.

        S Offline
        S Offline
        starcraft4ever
        wrote on last edited by
        #8

        Yes, I saw that Paint long ago (cool project), what I read from there is that it was never a official MS project. "It started development as an undergraduate college senior design project mentored by Microsoft". Also MSDN contains many articles and snippets about C# and .NET but they are not official MS applications that MS sell and gives support as all other apps that MS distribute.

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        • S starcraft4ever

          Five years have passed with the famous .NET framework and still I didn't see a single application (Client) from Microsoft made in .NET. Is there some application like Calc or Paint or something that MS did in .NET for Windows 2000, XP or Windows Vista? I really would like to see it. I love C#, but sometimes I feel like I’m a guinea pig, how come they advertise like the best platform to develop when them self don't use it? I guess they had the time, money and resources to train people in C#/.NET :)... Why it didn't happen. Also did you see any MS application on Vista using WPF? Sometimes I really wonder myself what's the reason MS it is not using .NET aggressively, and personal I think five years is more enough to come up with some working application, at least I'd like to see a Calc.exe or a Minesweeper distributed from them to make me feel more secure about it before keep going with C# and stop more and more using C++ just for very special things that you can't or are too difficult to do with C#. What do you think about it?

          G Offline
          G Offline
          gaurav_scr
          wrote on last edited by
          #9

          Microsoft Expression line of products uses .net I believe. Also visual studio.net uses .net too. You can confirm this using spy++ which shows that they are actually .net controls.

          S 1 Reply Last reply
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          • G gaurav_scr

            Microsoft Expression line of products uses .net I believe. Also visual studio.net uses .net too. You can confirm this using spy++ which shows that they are actually .net controls.

            S Offline
            S Offline
            starcraft4ever
            wrote on last edited by
            #10

            I'll see Microsoft Expression to see what I can find, I know nothing about it. >> Also visual studio.net uses .net too Of course many controls and libraries (dlls) in visual studio will be CLS Compliant, because they have to interactive with your application but so far it shows me that VS it is not a .NET application, may be I'm wrong. Basically I'm looking for applications (EXEs) that MS sold commercially to the public and gives support like any other application.

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            • F Frank Kerrigan

              Parts of SQL 2005 are .NET I believe.

              Grady Booch: I told Google to their face...what you need is some serious adult supervision. (2007 Turing lecture) http:\\www.frankkerrigan.com

              S Offline
              S Offline
              starcraft4ever
              wrote on last edited by
              #11

              Do you have a link where I can see that info? Also almost sure SQL 2005 contains .NET dlls that are COM visible, but really still doesn't mean SQL 2005 is a .NET app, probably because you can store C# inside the DB so the DB needs .NET supports then may be that is the reason for the extra .NET code and it is not necessary real .NET logic. Also when I open the .NET framework the .NET dlls use a HUGE amounts of P/Invokes, from my point of view that is not a real .NET application because still use unmanaged resources, allocation and release of memory, unsafe code, etc, what I want to mean with this is that probably if SQL 2005 contains .NET dlls but they are wrappers to unmanaged resources to be visible from the .NET framework, really it doesn’t mean “SQL 2005” is made in .NET.

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              • N Nirosh

                Administrative Tools\Microsoft .NET Framework X Configuration

                L.W.C. Nirosh. Colombo, Sri Lanka.

                S Offline
                S Offline
                starcraft4ever
                wrote on last edited by
                #12

                ?

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                • M Matglas

                  The Business Contact Manager of Office 2003 is also in .NET. But is .NET 1.1.

                  S Offline
                  S Offline
                  starcraft4ever
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #13

                  Thanks for the info, I'll take a look to it, I never used this application.

                  1 Reply Last reply
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                  • S starcraft4ever

                    Five years have passed with the famous .NET framework and still I didn't see a single application (Client) from Microsoft made in .NET. Is there some application like Calc or Paint or something that MS did in .NET for Windows 2000, XP or Windows Vista? I really would like to see it. I love C#, but sometimes I feel like I’m a guinea pig, how come they advertise like the best platform to develop when them self don't use it? I guess they had the time, money and resources to train people in C#/.NET :)... Why it didn't happen. Also did you see any MS application on Vista using WPF? Sometimes I really wonder myself what's the reason MS it is not using .NET aggressively, and personal I think five years is more enough to come up with some working application, at least I'd like to see a Calc.exe or a Minesweeper distributed from them to make me feel more secure about it before keep going with C# and stop more and more using C++ just for very special things that you can't or are too difficult to do with C#. What do you think about it?

                    B Offline
                    B Offline
                    benjymous
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #14

                    If you run Process Explorer[^] it has an option to highlight .NET processes. Oddly, it seems to think 3DS Max 9 is a .NET application, which I know for sure isn't true, so I guess it's not 100% accurate!

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                    • S starcraft4ever

                      Five years have passed with the famous .NET framework and still I didn't see a single application (Client) from Microsoft made in .NET. Is there some application like Calc or Paint or something that MS did in .NET for Windows 2000, XP or Windows Vista? I really would like to see it. I love C#, but sometimes I feel like I’m a guinea pig, how come they advertise like the best platform to develop when them self don't use it? I guess they had the time, money and resources to train people in C#/.NET :)... Why it didn't happen. Also did you see any MS application on Vista using WPF? Sometimes I really wonder myself what's the reason MS it is not using .NET aggressively, and personal I think five years is more enough to come up with some working application, at least I'd like to see a Calc.exe or a Minesweeper distributed from them to make me feel more secure about it before keep going with C# and stop more and more using C++ just for very special things that you can't or are too difficult to do with C#. What do you think about it?

                      P Offline
                      P Offline
                      Paul Watson
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #15

                      starcraft4ever wrote:

                      sometimes I feel like I’m a guinea pig

                      The .NET Framework will end with 3.0 as the experimentation phase ends. They will then roll out the Windows Live Ultimate Development Framework which will have learnt from .NET's mistakes. ;) I don't know why Microsoft don't use it more but I do know it is a handy framework on the Windows platform for desktop dev. It is pretty good for in-house apps, sort of like VB was but without the amateurism of VB. I enjoyed C# and .NET dev, lot more productive than the little bit of C++ and MFC I once tried.

                      regards, Paul Watson Ireland & South Africa

                      Shog9 wrote:

                      And with that, Paul closed his browser, sipped his herbal tea, fixed the flower in his hair, and smiled brightly at the multitude of cute, furry animals flocking around the grassy hillside where he sat coding Ruby on his Mac...

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                      • S starcraft4ever

                        I'll see Microsoft Expression to see what I can find, I know nothing about it. >> Also visual studio.net uses .net too Of course many controls and libraries (dlls) in visual studio will be CLS Compliant, because they have to interactive with your application but so far it shows me that VS it is not a .NET application, may be I'm wrong. Basically I'm looking for applications (EXEs) that MS sold commercially to the public and gives support like any other application.

                        S Offline
                        S Offline
                        starcraft4ever
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #16

                        I did Spy on VS and you right, many controls (but not even half) on it are .NET controls, especially on the properties screen. But still nothing confirm to me that VS is a .NET application looks like it is just a C/C++ app using several .NET controls from the .NET libraries exposed as COM objects, but the application itself devenv.exe is not .NET.

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                        • S starcraft4ever

                          Five years have passed with the famous .NET framework and still I didn't see a single application (Client) from Microsoft made in .NET. Is there some application like Calc or Paint or something that MS did in .NET for Windows 2000, XP or Windows Vista? I really would like to see it. I love C#, but sometimes I feel like I’m a guinea pig, how come they advertise like the best platform to develop when them self don't use it? I guess they had the time, money and resources to train people in C#/.NET :)... Why it didn't happen. Also did you see any MS application on Vista using WPF? Sometimes I really wonder myself what's the reason MS it is not using .NET aggressively, and personal I think five years is more enough to come up with some working application, at least I'd like to see a Calc.exe or a Minesweeper distributed from them to make me feel more secure about it before keep going with C# and stop more and more using C++ just for very special things that you can't or are too difficult to do with C#. What do you think about it?

                          1 Offline
                          1 Offline
                          123 0
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #17

                          starcraft4ever wrote:

                          What do you think about it?

                          All languages and frameworks fall for me, as a writer of compilers, into two groups: (1) tools that can be used to conveniently and efficiently reproduce themselves, and (2) tools that cannot. One can, for example, write a straight C compiler, in straight C, and produce a child as good - or better - than the parent. This is not the case, however, with C#: the language, in this sense, is sterile. Any serious programmer who gives the matter sufficient thought will, I believe, reach a similar classification scheme. I suspect that the serious programmers at Microsoft have done so and have - as a result of their analysis - rejected the C#/.NET combination as a "serious" development platform. The more experienced of the bunch, of course, knew this all along.

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                          0
                          • B benjymous

                            If you run Process Explorer[^] it has an option to highlight .NET processes. Oddly, it seems to think 3DS Max 9 is a .NET application, which I know for sure isn't true, so I guess it's not 100% accurate!

                            S Offline
                            S Offline
                            starcraft4ever
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #18

                            I just tested, amazing application. Thanks for the jewel. I think it just detect that there are dependencies and calls to .NET framework, but it really won’t mean necessary that it is a .NET application. For example the case when a C++ application invokes a .NET library exposed as a COM object. It is clear that the application is not a .NET application but probably “Process Explorer” will contain .NET information about it because of the dependencies. I’ll keep playing with this tool to see what else I can find.

                            1 Reply Last reply
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                            • 1 123 0

                              starcraft4ever wrote:

                              What do you think about it?

                              All languages and frameworks fall for me, as a writer of compilers, into two groups: (1) tools that can be used to conveniently and efficiently reproduce themselves, and (2) tools that cannot. One can, for example, write a straight C compiler, in straight C, and produce a child as good - or better - than the parent. This is not the case, however, with C#: the language, in this sense, is sterile. Any serious programmer who gives the matter sufficient thought will, I believe, reach a similar classification scheme. I suspect that the serious programmers at Microsoft have done so and have - as a result of their analysis - rejected the C#/.NET combination as a "serious" development platform. The more experienced of the bunch, of course, knew this all along.

                              S Offline
                              S Offline
                              starcraft4ever
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #19

                              >> however, with C#: the language, in this sense, is sterile. I'm still laughing for that :-D >> I suspect that the serious programmers at Microsoft have done so and have - as a result of their analysis - rejected the C#/.NET combination as a "serious" development platform. The more experienced of the bunch, of course, knew this all along. But then under that classification are you meaning that C# is another VB? and then it should not be taken seriously like to be used for big companies to run mission critical processes?

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                              0
                              • 1 123 0

                                starcraft4ever wrote:

                                What do you think about it?

                                All languages and frameworks fall for me, as a writer of compilers, into two groups: (1) tools that can be used to conveniently and efficiently reproduce themselves, and (2) tools that cannot. One can, for example, write a straight C compiler, in straight C, and produce a child as good - or better - than the parent. This is not the case, however, with C#: the language, in this sense, is sterile. Any serious programmer who gives the matter sufficient thought will, I believe, reach a similar classification scheme. I suspect that the serious programmers at Microsoft have done so and have - as a result of their analysis - rejected the C#/.NET combination as a "serious" development platform. The more experienced of the bunch, of course, knew this all along.

                                Z Offline
                                Z Offline
                                Zoltan Balazs
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #20

                                So you're saying that Java is also rejected as a serious development platform?

                                company, work and everything else @ netis

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                                • P Paul Watson

                                  starcraft4ever wrote:

                                  sometimes I feel like I’m a guinea pig

                                  The .NET Framework will end with 3.0 as the experimentation phase ends. They will then roll out the Windows Live Ultimate Development Framework which will have learnt from .NET's mistakes. ;) I don't know why Microsoft don't use it more but I do know it is a handy framework on the Windows platform for desktop dev. It is pretty good for in-house apps, sort of like VB was but without the amateurism of VB. I enjoyed C# and .NET dev, lot more productive than the little bit of C++ and MFC I once tried.

                                  regards, Paul Watson Ireland & South Africa

                                  Shog9 wrote:

                                  And with that, Paul closed his browser, sipped his herbal tea, fixed the flower in his hair, and smiled brightly at the multitude of cute, furry animals flocking around the grassy hillside where he sat coding Ruby on his Mac...

                                  S Offline
                                  S Offline
                                  starcraft4ever
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #21

                                  >> They will then roll out the Windows Live Ultimate Development Framework But still is a framework that developers will keep using. Now, the question is? Microsoft will make use of it to enhance the OS or will keep using C/C++ and .NET wrappers where the 95% of the APIs are P/Invoke calls? >> I don't know why Microsoft don't use it more but I do know it is a handy framework on the Windows platform for desktop dev. It is pretty good for in-house apps, sort of like VB was but without the amateurism of VB. I enjoyed C# and .NET dev, lot more productive than the little bit of C++ and MFC I once tried. I did for many C/C++, VB, and C# and so far C# is really handy and powerful, for that I keep asking me, why MS didn’t use aggressively in the last 3 or 2 years.

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                                  • S starcraft4ever

                                    I did Spy on VS and you right, many controls (but not even half) on it are .NET controls, especially on the properties screen. But still nothing confirm to me that VS is a .NET application looks like it is just a C/C++ app using several .NET controls from the .NET libraries exposed as COM objects, but the application itself devenv.exe is not .NET.

                                    G Offline
                                    G Offline
                                    gaurav_scr
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #22

                                    Visual studio is partly .net. But expression line of products are entirely made in wpf/.net3.0. The user interface is really different and takes time getting used to. I have use expression blend and it has a really small install size as compared to other microsoft products. So at last they have started using their technologies.

                                    1 Reply Last reply
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                                    • S starcraft4ever

                                      >> however, with C#: the language, in this sense, is sterile. I'm still laughing for that :-D >> I suspect that the serious programmers at Microsoft have done so and have - as a result of their analysis - rejected the C#/.NET combination as a "serious" development platform. The more experienced of the bunch, of course, knew this all along. But then under that classification are you meaning that C# is another VB? and then it should not be taken seriously like to be used for big companies to run mission critical processes?

                                      Z Offline
                                      Z Offline
                                      Zoltan Balazs
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #23

                                      By the way there is a thread on this subject on Dan Fenrandez's blog[^]

                                      company, work and everything else @ netis

                                      S 1 Reply Last reply
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                                      • P Paul Watson

                                        starcraft4ever wrote:

                                        sometimes I feel like I’m a guinea pig

                                        The .NET Framework will end with 3.0 as the experimentation phase ends. They will then roll out the Windows Live Ultimate Development Framework which will have learnt from .NET's mistakes. ;) I don't know why Microsoft don't use it more but I do know it is a handy framework on the Windows platform for desktop dev. It is pretty good for in-house apps, sort of like VB was but without the amateurism of VB. I enjoyed C# and .NET dev, lot more productive than the little bit of C++ and MFC I once tried.

                                        regards, Paul Watson Ireland & South Africa

                                        Shog9 wrote:

                                        And with that, Paul closed his browser, sipped his herbal tea, fixed the flower in his hair, and smiled brightly at the multitude of cute, furry animals flocking around the grassy hillside where he sat coding Ruby on his Mac...

                                        M Offline
                                        M Offline
                                        Michael P Butler
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #24

                                        Paul Watson wrote:

                                        I don't know why Microsoft don't use it more but I do know it is a handy framework on the Windows platform for desktop dev.

                                        What new apps have Microsoft written recently? Most of their product line is upgrades to legacy apps and they ain't going to rewrite all that code.

                                        Michael CP Blog [^] Development Blog [^]

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                                        • M Michael P Butler

                                          Paul Watson wrote:

                                          I don't know why Microsoft don't use it more but I do know it is a handy framework on the Windows platform for desktop dev.

                                          What new apps have Microsoft written recently? Most of their product line is upgrades to legacy apps and they ain't going to rewrite all that code.

                                          Michael CP Blog [^] Development Blog [^]

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                                          P Offline
                                          Paul Watson
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #25

                                          Well, Windows Vista was rewritten in the lifetime of .NET ;)

                                          regards, Paul Watson Ireland & South Africa

                                          Shog9 wrote:

                                          And with that, Paul closed his browser, sipped his herbal tea, fixed the flower in his hair, and smiled brightly at the multitude of cute, furry animals flocking around the grassy hillside where he sat coding Ruby on his Mac...

                                          1 Reply Last reply
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