Future editions of Visual Studio will target non-programmers
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In today's Insider, there was a link to an article[^] about Orcas not shipping this year. In the last paragraph of that article, it mentioned that "Future editions of Visual Studio will target non-programmers." How does everyone feel about this? I'm not sure about what MS's intentions would be, unless they are trying to create a "codeless programming" IDE - click and drag to create applications. From my experience, programmers have a certain mindset and Visual Studio (and other IDE's) is a toolkit that has been designed by programmers for programmers. Would non-programmers be able to adapt their expectations of computer usage to the "programmers" toolkit? Or will the programmers developing VS be able to create something that would enable non-programmers to use it, without dumbing it down for the rest of us. It all makes for an interesting future in the world of dev!
ChrisB ChrisDoesDev[^]
Will they also make a version for non-supercomputers? ie,one that works fast?
:badger:
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In today's Insider, there was a link to an article[^] about Orcas not shipping this year. In the last paragraph of that article, it mentioned that "Future editions of Visual Studio will target non-programmers." How does everyone feel about this? I'm not sure about what MS's intentions would be, unless they are trying to create a "codeless programming" IDE - click and drag to create applications. From my experience, programmers have a certain mindset and Visual Studio (and other IDE's) is a toolkit that has been designed by programmers for programmers. Would non-programmers be able to adapt their expectations of computer usage to the "programmers" toolkit? Or will the programmers developing VS be able to create something that would enable non-programmers to use it, without dumbing it down for the rest of us. It all makes for an interesting future in the world of dev!
ChrisB ChrisDoesDev[^]
Time to move onto something new if this does happen, this job will have lost all interest and dignity, may consider Landscape Gardening or my own Restuarant. Any old being able to create an application from scratch, reminds me of the VB days again :sigh:
.net is a box of never ending treasures, every day I get find another gem.
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In today's Insider, there was a link to an article[^] about Orcas not shipping this year. In the last paragraph of that article, it mentioned that "Future editions of Visual Studio will target non-programmers." How does everyone feel about this? I'm not sure about what MS's intentions would be, unless they are trying to create a "codeless programming" IDE - click and drag to create applications. From my experience, programmers have a certain mindset and Visual Studio (and other IDE's) is a toolkit that has been designed by programmers for programmers. Would non-programmers be able to adapt their expectations of computer usage to the "programmers" toolkit? Or will the programmers developing VS be able to create something that would enable non-programmers to use it, without dumbing it down for the rest of us. It all makes for an interesting future in the world of dev!
ChrisB ChrisDoesDev[^]
Chris Buckett wrote:
"Future editions of Visual Studio will target non-programmers."
So they're keeping support for VB, then.
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In today's Insider, there was a link to an article[^] about Orcas not shipping this year. In the last paragraph of that article, it mentioned that "Future editions of Visual Studio will target non-programmers." How does everyone feel about this? I'm not sure about what MS's intentions would be, unless they are trying to create a "codeless programming" IDE - click and drag to create applications. From my experience, programmers have a certain mindset and Visual Studio (and other IDE's) is a toolkit that has been designed by programmers for programmers. Would non-programmers be able to adapt their expectations of computer usage to the "programmers" toolkit? Or will the programmers developing VS be able to create something that would enable non-programmers to use it, without dumbing it down for the rest of us. It all makes for an interesting future in the world of dev!
ChrisB ChrisDoesDev[^]
I completely agree with this if yo use the evolution of IDE's it to make sure that anybody could pick it up as soon as possible and develop the required application for usage...
Regards, Jaiprakash M Bankolli jaiprakash.bankolli@gmail.com http://jaiprakash.blog.com/
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In today's Insider, there was a link to an article[^] about Orcas not shipping this year. In the last paragraph of that article, it mentioned that "Future editions of Visual Studio will target non-programmers." How does everyone feel about this? I'm not sure about what MS's intentions would be, unless they are trying to create a "codeless programming" IDE - click and drag to create applications. From my experience, programmers have a certain mindset and Visual Studio (and other IDE's) is a toolkit that has been designed by programmers for programmers. Would non-programmers be able to adapt their expectations of computer usage to the "programmers" toolkit? Or will the programmers developing VS be able to create something that would enable non-programmers to use it, without dumbing it down for the rest of us. It all makes for an interesting future in the world of dev!
ChrisB ChrisDoesDev[^]
The programmerless era has been promised for some time and never yet delivered. We'll see; I wouldn't hold my breath!
Steve
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In today's Insider, there was a link to an article[^] about Orcas not shipping this year. In the last paragraph of that article, it mentioned that "Future editions of Visual Studio will target non-programmers." How does everyone feel about this? I'm not sure about what MS's intentions would be, unless they are trying to create a "codeless programming" IDE - click and drag to create applications. From my experience, programmers have a certain mindset and Visual Studio (and other IDE's) is a toolkit that has been designed by programmers for programmers. Would non-programmers be able to adapt their expectations of computer usage to the "programmers" toolkit? Or will the programmers developing VS be able to create something that would enable non-programmers to use it, without dumbing it down for the rest of us. It all makes for an interesting future in the world of dev!
ChrisB ChrisDoesDev[^]
Chris Buckett wrote:
How does everyone feel about this?
In fact, it makes me very sad. I think this will change the definition of what a programmer is, at least from my point of view. Soon everyone will be considered programmers and some will program in PowerPoint. :suss: I suspect that employers and other characters responsible for development will jump on this hype since it more or less promises that the development cost will be radically decreased. It will probably be a tough market for some time, but I think it will shoot itself in the foot when people realize that the competence resides in the human being and not in the tool. The whole embedded systems field probably won't be effected by this "hype", leaving opportunities for real programmers.
"It's supposed to be hard, otherwise anybody could do it!" - selfquote
"High speed never compensates for wrong direction!" - unknown -
In today's Insider, there was a link to an article[^] about Orcas not shipping this year. In the last paragraph of that article, it mentioned that "Future editions of Visual Studio will target non-programmers." How does everyone feel about this? I'm not sure about what MS's intentions would be, unless they are trying to create a "codeless programming" IDE - click and drag to create applications. From my experience, programmers have a certain mindset and Visual Studio (and other IDE's) is a toolkit that has been designed by programmers for programmers. Would non-programmers be able to adapt their expectations of computer usage to the "programmers" toolkit? Or will the programmers developing VS be able to create something that would enable non-programmers to use it, without dumbing it down for the rest of us. It all makes for an interesting future in the world of dev!
ChrisB ChrisDoesDev[^]
Microsoft have had this as a stated aim since the early 90s. This is nothing new. Nor does it mean the end of programming - despite what the doomsayers might argue. Can we really see a tool being written where you drag and drop different pieces together to create an operating system? Let's take a more fundamental task - creation of database driven applications. Let's see the average user sitting at home knock up an enterprise level database with 500+ tables using nothing but drag and drop. Heck - Joe Schmoe has enough trouble operating the remote control for his DVD player. This level of complexity is going to blow the Burberry baseball cap right off his head. There is certainly an argument in favour of creating more service driven applications where you "glue" different parts of the system together, but as we all know there will still be a need to customize and change it just to fit your business needs. I'm not worrying about it right now.
Deja View - the feeling that you've seen this post before.
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In today's Insider, there was a link to an article[^] about Orcas not shipping this year. In the last paragraph of that article, it mentioned that "Future editions of Visual Studio will target non-programmers." How does everyone feel about this? I'm not sure about what MS's intentions would be, unless they are trying to create a "codeless programming" IDE - click and drag to create applications. From my experience, programmers have a certain mindset and Visual Studio (and other IDE's) is a toolkit that has been designed by programmers for programmers. Would non-programmers be able to adapt their expectations of computer usage to the "programmers" toolkit? Or will the programmers developing VS be able to create something that would enable non-programmers to use it, without dumbing it down for the rest of us. It all makes for an interesting future in the world of dev!
ChrisB ChrisDoesDev[^]
It's not about non-programmers doing the programmers' jobs. It's about moving everything related to the development process into the IDE - including the parts done by non-programmers (the article names "project management, development and operations management").
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It's not about non-programmers doing the programmers' jobs. It's about moving everything related to the development process into the IDE - including the parts done by non-programmers (the article names "project management, development and operations management").
Daniel Grunwald wrote:
It's about moving everything related to the development process into the IDE - including the parts done by non-programmers
Aah, now that makes a lot of sense.
ChrisB ChrisDoesDev[^]
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In today's Insider, there was a link to an article[^] about Orcas not shipping this year. In the last paragraph of that article, it mentioned that "Future editions of Visual Studio will target non-programmers." How does everyone feel about this? I'm not sure about what MS's intentions would be, unless they are trying to create a "codeless programming" IDE - click and drag to create applications. From my experience, programmers have a certain mindset and Visual Studio (and other IDE's) is a toolkit that has been designed by programmers for programmers. Would non-programmers be able to adapt their expectations of computer usage to the "programmers" toolkit? Or will the programmers developing VS be able to create something that would enable non-programmers to use it, without dumbing it down for the rest of us. It all makes for an interesting future in the world of dev!
ChrisB ChrisDoesDev[^]
It's all happened before. Around 2000 - 2001 everyone predicted the end of the desktop app in favour of the Application Service Provider model, and around 1996 - 1997 everyone touted drag-and-drop flowchart programming as the way of the future. Maybe another few iterations and we'll see something worthwhile.
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Chris Buckett wrote:
"Future editions of Visual Studio will target non-programmers."
So they're keeping support for VB, then.
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It's not about non-programmers doing the programmers' jobs. It's about moving everything related to the development process into the IDE - including the parts done by non-programmers (the article names "project management, development and operations management").
Well said. After all, it's Integrated Developement Enviroment...
"Throughout human history, we have been dependent on machines to survive. Fate, it seems, is not without a sense of irony. " - Morpheus "Real men use mspaint for writing code and notepad for designing graphics." - Anna-Jayne Metcalfe
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In today's Insider, there was a link to an article[^] about Orcas not shipping this year. In the last paragraph of that article, it mentioned that "Future editions of Visual Studio will target non-programmers." How does everyone feel about this? I'm not sure about what MS's intentions would be, unless they are trying to create a "codeless programming" IDE - click and drag to create applications. From my experience, programmers have a certain mindset and Visual Studio (and other IDE's) is a toolkit that has been designed by programmers for programmers. Would non-programmers be able to adapt their expectations of computer usage to the "programmers" toolkit? Or will the programmers developing VS be able to create something that would enable non-programmers to use it, without dumbing it down for the rest of us. It all makes for an interesting future in the world of dev!
ChrisB ChrisDoesDev[^]
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Chris Buckett wrote:
How does everyone feel about this?
In fact, it makes me very sad. I think this will change the definition of what a programmer is, at least from my point of view. Soon everyone will be considered programmers and some will program in PowerPoint. :suss: I suspect that employers and other characters responsible for development will jump on this hype since it more or less promises that the development cost will be radically decreased. It will probably be a tough market for some time, but I think it will shoot itself in the foot when people realize that the competence resides in the human being and not in the tool. The whole embedded systems field probably won't be effected by this "hype", leaving opportunities for real programmers.
"It's supposed to be hard, otherwise anybody could do it!" - selfquote
"High speed never compensates for wrong direction!" - unknown -
It's not about non-programmers doing the programmers' jobs. It's about moving everything related to the development process into the IDE - including the parts done by non-programmers (the article names "project management, development and operations management").
OK, so the continuation of VSTS. Well, that's no big deal.
Christian Graus - Microsoft MVP - C++ Metal Musings - Rex and my new metal blog "I am working on a project that will convert a FORTRAN code to corresponding C++ code.I am not aware of FORTRAN syntax" ( spotted in the C++/CLI forum )
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In today's Insider, there was a link to an article[^] about Orcas not shipping this year. In the last paragraph of that article, it mentioned that "Future editions of Visual Studio will target non-programmers." How does everyone feel about this? I'm not sure about what MS's intentions would be, unless they are trying to create a "codeless programming" IDE - click and drag to create applications. From my experience, programmers have a certain mindset and Visual Studio (and other IDE's) is a toolkit that has been designed by programmers for programmers. Would non-programmers be able to adapt their expectations of computer usage to the "programmers" toolkit? Or will the programmers developing VS be able to create something that would enable non-programmers to use it, without dumbing it down for the rest of us. It all makes for an interesting future in the world of dev!
ChrisB ChrisDoesDev[^]
Think about MS Access. so what if they target 'non' developers. Developers will always have an upper hand.
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In today's Insider, there was a link to an article[^] about Orcas not shipping this year. In the last paragraph of that article, it mentioned that "Future editions of Visual Studio will target non-programmers." How does everyone feel about this? I'm not sure about what MS's intentions would be, unless they are trying to create a "codeless programming" IDE - click and drag to create applications. From my experience, programmers have a certain mindset and Visual Studio (and other IDE's) is a toolkit that has been designed by programmers for programmers. Would non-programmers be able to adapt their expectations of computer usage to the "programmers" toolkit? Or will the programmers developing VS be able to create something that would enable non-programmers to use it, without dumbing it down for the rest of us. It all makes for an interesting future in the world of dev!
ChrisB ChrisDoesDev[^]
Chris Buckett wrote:
How does everyone feel about this?
It's inevitable. For example, with Interacx, I've created two demos so far (screenshots, a punch clock[^] and contact manager[^] application). These were created without any programming as we think of it. The apps are n-tier, capable of automatically synchronizing among clients, etc. They're created using a schema designer, form designer, and report designer. The logic is expressed as workflows, not as actual "code", again as we normally think of programming. The entire Interacx suite was developed by myself over a period of a year spending certainly less than 40 hours a week on it. Documentation is non-existant, there's lots of missing features and I'm discovering certain "gotchas" that I'm still solving. Now imagine what Microsoft can do, leveraging WPF, Entity Framework, WF, WCF, and things like Linq. I absolutely see that non-programmers will be able to create professional business applications that work in WinForm, Web, and Mobile platforms. I'm actually more amazed this hasn't happened yet! What programmers will be doing is coding up the special cases that app frameworks like Interacx can't handle natively--the custom client and server side logic that is application specific that cannot be expressed by the built in or third party workflows. It's neither good nor bad. It's what's going to happen. Marc
People are just notoriously impossible. --DavidCrow
There's NO excuse for not commenting your code. -- John Simmons / outlaw programmer
People who say that they will refactor their code later to make it "good" don't understand refactoring, nor the art and craft of programming. -- Josh Smith -
Chris Buckett wrote:
How does everyone feel about this?
It's inevitable. For example, with Interacx, I've created two demos so far (screenshots, a punch clock[^] and contact manager[^] application). These were created without any programming as we think of it. The apps are n-tier, capable of automatically synchronizing among clients, etc. They're created using a schema designer, form designer, and report designer. The logic is expressed as workflows, not as actual "code", again as we normally think of programming. The entire Interacx suite was developed by myself over a period of a year spending certainly less than 40 hours a week on it. Documentation is non-existant, there's lots of missing features and I'm discovering certain "gotchas" that I'm still solving. Now imagine what Microsoft can do, leveraging WPF, Entity Framework, WF, WCF, and things like Linq. I absolutely see that non-programmers will be able to create professional business applications that work in WinForm, Web, and Mobile platforms. I'm actually more amazed this hasn't happened yet! What programmers will be doing is coding up the special cases that app frameworks like Interacx can't handle natively--the custom client and server side logic that is application specific that cannot be expressed by the built in or third party workflows. It's neither good nor bad. It's what's going to happen. Marc
People are just notoriously impossible. --DavidCrow
There's NO excuse for not commenting your code. -- John Simmons / outlaw programmer
People who say that they will refactor their code later to make it "good" don't understand refactoring, nor the art and craft of programming. -- Josh SmithAdvertising your product Mr Clifton?:-D Seriously though, you are right. This is the logical extension to utilities like code generators and architectures like SOA. Abstraction frameworks are now easier to create than ever before, and it makes sense that applications will be built using components that encapsulate "best" practices.
Deja View - the feeling that you've seen this post before.
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Think about MS Access. so what if they target 'non' developers. Developers will always have an upper hand.
Paul Brower wrote:
Think about MS Access. so what if they target 'non' developers. Developers will always have an upper hand
True - but developers will end up having to sort out the mess that these systems create.
Deja View - the feeling that you've seen this post before.
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Paul Brower wrote:
Think about MS Access. so what if they target 'non' developers. Developers will always have an upper hand
True - but developers will end up having to sort out the mess that these systems create.
Deja View - the feeling that you've seen this post before.
I got some good projects about 10 years back from companies that wanted to 'fix' home-grown ms access systems. The problem for companies that allow non developers to 'develop', is that sooner or later the system needs to be fixed or enhanced ... something that is difficult to do if proven development methodologies have not been used. ... not to mention ... Mr. Gates won't abandon us developers ... he IS one of us:)