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  3. win32...MFC...obsolete?

win32...MFC...obsolete?

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  • P Perspx

    Oh God.. I hate .NET :sigh: --PerspX

    "Nowadays, security guys break the Mac every single day. Every single day, they come out with a total exploit, your machine can be taken over totally. I dare anybody to do that once a month on the Windows machine." - Bill Gates

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    NormDroid
    wrote on last edited by
    #46

    Time to start rethinking your career then, there's not much to left to pick at; php, ruby, html flash. Unless you work for HP/Microsoft you won't see much Win32/MFC/ATL.

    Roger Irrelevant "he's completely hatstand"

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    • N Nish Nishant

      deostroll wrote:

      Is the win32 platform going obsolete? Is it being replaced by the dotnet framework or something like that?

      There's this CPian guy here - I forget his name, from Texas. Fellow was dead against .NET and kept saying garbage collection sucks and all that. Last I heard he's been running around in a mad rush trying to get a .NET job. He's even porting some of his C++ code into C#. That says it for you I think. Now if only I could remember who I am talking about. :rolleyes:

      Regards, Nish


      Nish’s thoughts on MFC, C++/CLI and .NET (my blog)
      My latest book : C++/CLI in Action / Amazon.com link

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      realJSOP
      wrote on last edited by
      #47

      It most certainly wasn't a "mad rush". Further, the job includes C++ and even a little PHP. I'm certainly expanding my skillset, but I still consider myself to be a C++ programmer first and foremost. Lastly, I may be working in C#/.Net, but you should never assume for even a fraction of a second that my personal view regarding .Net has changed in even the slightest of measurements.

      "Why don't you tie a kerosene-soaked rag around your ankles so the ants won't climb up and eat your candy ass..." - Dale Earnhardt, 1997
      -----
      "...the staggering layers of obscenity in your statement make it a work of art on so many levels." - Jason Jystad, 10/26/2001

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      • P Paul Conrad

        Mark Salsbery wrote:

        to be switched over by this fall

        And go with Visual Lisp++, it's the wave of the future. Just imagine all the curly-cues :laugh:

        "Real programmers just throw a bunch of 1s and 0s at the computer to see what sticks" - Pete O'Hanlon

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        Lilith C
        wrote on last edited by
        #48

        Paul Conrad wrote:

        And go with Visual Lisp++, it's the wave of the future. Just imagine all the curly-cues

        My shift key won't take the stress. Lilith

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        • D deostroll

          Is the win32 platform going obsolete? Is it being replaced by the dotnet framework or something like that?

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          el delo
          wrote on last edited by
          #49

          IMO: MFC should have been obsolete years ago. I doubt Win32 is going anywhere. .Net is a better app layer than MFC, IMHO. Having contracted at MS, I can say that at least in the OS and other lower-levels, C++ and Win32 are pretty much here to stay. I heard talk around the halls that XMAL + WPF are here to stay and will become the new MFC/.Net over time. However I, like many others, am skeptical. Personally (this is pure conjecture) I think MS is hoping and believing the "Everything Everywhere Live" (Windows Live, MSN LIve, Live Live, Your-Credit-Card-To-Our-Subscription-Server-Farm Live, etc ad nauseum), apps-through-web-based-subscritions movement is going to take off. If that be the case, XAML + WPF do make some sense. But as others have noted there's a lot of issues left to be resolved before Joe Accountant is going to trust the company farm to "Excel Live" with his data in an MS server farm somewhere and held ransom by BillG. "We're sorry your high availibilty ultra-premium business storage is offline. Your wait time will be 32.6 days. For only $500 per fifteen minutes, we can escalate your call to a live level N LiveGuru support engineer, and hopefully recover your data over in Moses Lake. Message 6."

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          • C Chris Losinger

            Visual LISP .Net 2010++ , i think

            image processing toolkits | batch image processing | blogging

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            Richard Jones
            wrote on last edited by
            #50

            Chris Losinger wrote:

            Visual LISP .Net 2010++ , i think

            I prefer Prolog myself:rolleyes:.

            Paul Watson wrote: Like, if you say sort of, like, you know, one more, you know, time, I'm going to, like, you know, sort of sort you out, you know.

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            • P Paul Conrad

              Mark Salsbery wrote:

              to be switched over by this fall

              And go with Visual Lisp++, it's the wave of the future. Just imagine all the curly-cues :laugh:

              "Real programmers just throw a bunch of 1s and 0s at the computer to see what sticks" - Pete O'Hanlon

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              Jorick23
              wrote on last edited by
              #51

              I can't uthe lithp. I have a thpeech impediment...

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              • D deostroll

                Is the win32 platform going obsolete? Is it being replaced by the dotnet framework or something like that?

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                John Patrick Francis
                wrote on last edited by
                #52

                I've been programming since 1965, good old FORTRAN, and I've seen this type of comment at least 25 times, maybe more. I do not know what will be the next, but it will boil down to do getting the job done right. Some environments like Lisp, Ada, UML, and others have brought major change to this industry. Some have improved things for us in the front lines to make our jobs easier and to help transition in and out of a project. Taking over an old FORTRAN 'Style' program is not so much fun. It is possible today to design and code in some great languages, like C#, Java, & DotNet, unfortunately there are some people who leave a mess for others to clean up. I do like MFC and Borland-Builder and C# and what ever comes next, but no real leap forward will come if we take the easy-way and not the right-way of expressing our code so both the machine and the man understand what we were try to do. John P. Francis

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                • D deostroll

                  Is the win32 platform going obsolete? Is it being replaced by the dotnet framework or something like that?

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                  AKAJamie
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #53

                  No. The .NET platform is built on top of the Win32 platform. All Win32 function calls are accessible from .NET. That's a good thing since .NET does not implement wrappers for all Win32 functions. MFC is on its way out. Although the last time I spoke to Jeff Prosise he told me that quite a bit of development in India is still done with MFC. .NET simplifies the programming model for accessing the Windows operating system's functionality and provides value adds like the Garbage Collector, and a permanently allocated thread pool so that calls to instantiate worker threads are faster than in classic Win32 programming.

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                  • N Nemanja Trifunovic

                    deostroll wrote:

                    Is the win32 platform going obsolete?

                    Yep.

                    deostroll wrote:

                    Is it being replaced by the dotnet framework

                    That's obsolete as well.

                    deostroll wrote:

                    or something like that?

                    Yep - JavaScript.


                    Programming Blog utf8-cpp

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                    deostroll
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #54

                    Nemanja Trifunovic wrote: Yep - JavaScript.

                    That is for web-based technologies! I am talking about applications that run on the computer (or computer based applications). I guess you can't really rely on technology. You should have the skills.

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                    • N NormDroid

                      Time to start rethinking your career then, there's not much to left to pick at; php, ruby, html flash. Unless you work for HP/Microsoft you won't see much Win32/MFC/ATL.

                      Roger Irrelevant "he's completely hatstand"

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                      Perspx
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #55

                      Career? Haha.. I'm 14 so programming isn't my career :p And I don't see why .NET would take off..? It's a Microsoft product, and the user has to download the framework for .NET applications to run.. --PerspX

                      "Nowadays, security guys break the Mac every single day. Every single day, they come out with a total exploit, your machine can be taken over totally. I dare anybody to do that once a month on the Windows machine." - Bill Gates

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                      • E El Corazon

                        deostroll wrote:

                        Is the win32 platform going obsolete?

                        For most applications, yes. Microsoft would very much like it to, so yes, it will, though as mentioned, it is still holding on much to MS's dismay.

                        deostroll wrote:

                        Is it being replaced by the dotnet framework or something like that?

                        For many things, for a great majority of business software, absolutely it already has. However, there are other things affecting even dotNet in the near future. Will it be obsoleted too? probably, but maybe not. Will managed languages replace all programming on the planet for all applications, in all environments, in all industries, etc., etc., etc..... No. Nor will everything I do affect dotNet and its environs. That is just life. dotNet, and any successor environment will allways have advantagees in certain environments. Other ways will have the same in thiers. The honest truth is that Microsoft is not trying to please all the people all of the time, nor should anyone expect them to. They are in it for the money (don't fool yourself into thinking they are doing it for your well being). But this is not a bad thing, per se. Improvements in workflow that affect the vast majority of programmers, is what they are there to do. Sometimes they make mistakes, feedback sets them straight. Sometimes they do good, feedback encourages them for more. That is life. I can wave some muscle, and have, to influence a small decision or two. But I don't fool myself into thinking I will ever fully change the MS business model. Do what you can, learn what you can, and move on if you have to. That is life. Some things change, and some things stay the same.

                        _________________________ Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau. Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)

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                        deostroll
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #56

                        You know I am just out right tired with technology - it just keeps on changing. You can't avert the change. Change is imminent in the whole business of software. Keep this point in mind. Next I'd like to discuss the idea of platform independence. It just a marketing gimmick. There is nothing truly platform independent. And when I mean platform independent I mean the program that you write for your computer should work for you mobile and your calculator. Now let us take the example of java. The motto "write once run anywhere" is bogus. There are reasons why I claim it is bogus. 1. It is a marketing gimmick. We really need the java runtimes to work our program. Without that our programs are simply interpreted as garbage. 2. Runtime is a kind of host environment. You all know this. But the host environment is specially built for the various operating systems out there. The host environment that operates for windows is not the same as that for linux. 3. The runtime is not free as in "free software" Ok I admit that I am a sort of free software person; I uphold the gnu philosophy. But technologies such as java or dotnet don't! Why I say that? Because the basic idea behind creating a host environment is not free. If it was then the possibility of people There may be standards that say what features that a host environment like java or dotnet should contain, but when you come to the point of implementing it you are on your own. Your ideas get into it. My final point is that if you have thought this through you'd realise that there is nothing new in technology. It may be simpler to work with or stuff like that. It may help you be more productive. But if you want to survive you should rather have an uncompromising skill set. And this does not mean knowledge in one technology or many technologies. Rather you should have some basic understanding of those concepts that those technologies provide, like for e.g. interfaces in java or dotnet. I'll call you a programmer if you can successfully mimic the concept of interfaces and implement it on a borland c++ 3.0 compiler. I know its outdated, and I know it is not "free" either. But that is not my point you see!

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                        • D deostroll

                          Is the win32 platform going obsolete? Is it being replaced by the dotnet framework or something like that?

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                          Rei Miyasaka
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #57

                          My prof is making us code in MFC. In this day and age. I kid you not. No one is happy, of course.

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                          • Richard Andrew x64R Richard Andrew x64

                            What do you think of this guy's opinion? He is Allen Holub from Holub.com http://www.sdtimes.com/fullcolumn/column-20060901-05.html[^] "XML is perhaps the worst programming language ever conceived. I’m not talking about XML as a data-description language, which was its original design. I’m talking about perverting XML for programming applications. It’s inappropriate to use XML as a scripting language (e.g., ANT), a test-description language (e.g., TestNG), an object-relational mapping language (e.g., Hibernate, JDO), a control-flow language (e.g., JSF), and so forth. These sorts of XML “programs” are unreadable, unmaintainable, an order of magnitude larger than necessary, and audaciously inefficient at runtime."

                            -------------------------------- "All that is necessary for the forces of evil to win in the world is for enough good men to do nothing" -- Edmund Burke

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                            deostroll
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #58

                            From _http://www.sdtimes.com/fullcolumn/column-20060901-05.html_

                            XML is perhaps the worst programming language ever conceived

                            XML = eXtensible Markup Language. It is a standard for defining and describing data. So technically it is not a programming language. XSLT or XPATH may be programming languages. Operating systems can be xml-based...not a problem. By this what they probably mean is that some settings/data that has to be persisted (like for e.g. your desktop wallpaper, your window settings, etc) will be stored with a .xml file extension.

                            Richard Andrew x64R 1 Reply Last reply
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                            • E El Corazon

                              Richie308 wrote:

                              Do you believe that MS wishes to move toward an operating system that supports ONLY managed applications? An OS where all user-mode code is managed, or else it doesn't run?

                              Yes. Microsoft has made it quite clear that this is where they would like to be. They also would rather you not buy any software, only lease an office service, or media service, etc. The operating system would only be the lowest level internet appliance with everything run off their servers, or other company's servers. Getting there is harder than simply wanting to be there. Thus we are where we are.

                              _________________________ Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau. Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)

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                              deostroll
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #59

                              El Corazon wrote:

                              Yes. Microsoft has made it quite clear that this is where they would like to be. They also would rather you not buy any software, only lease an office service, or media service, etc. The operating system would only be the lowest level internet appliance with everything run off their servers, or other company's servers.

                              I wonder what that age would be like?

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                              • D deostroll

                                From _http://www.sdtimes.com/fullcolumn/column-20060901-05.html_

                                XML is perhaps the worst programming language ever conceived

                                XML = eXtensible Markup Language. It is a standard for defining and describing data. So technically it is not a programming language. XSLT or XPATH may be programming languages. Operating systems can be xml-based...not a problem. By this what they probably mean is that some settings/data that has to be persisted (like for e.g. your desktop wallpaper, your window settings, etc) will be stored with a .xml file extension.

                                Richard Andrew x64R Offline
                                Richard Andrew x64R Offline
                                Richard Andrew x64
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #60

                                You must have not read past the first sentence of the quote. He is fully aware that XML is not a programming language. His point is that it makes for a terrible programming language because it is in fact NOT one. Go back and re-read the entire quote, and even better, read the article.

                                -------------------------------- "All that is necessary for the forces of evil to win in the world is for enough good men to do nothing" -- Edmund Burke

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                                • L Lilith C

                                  Paul Conrad wrote:

                                  And go with Visual Lisp++, it's the wave of the future. Just imagine all the curly-cues

                                  My shift key won't take the stress. Lilith

                                  P Offline
                                  P Offline
                                  Paul Conrad
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #61

                                  Lilith.C wrote:

                                  shift key won't take the stress

                                  Ehhh, who cares? Keyboards are pretty inexpensive :)

                                  "Real programmers just throw a bunch of 1s and 0s at the computer to see what sticks" - Pete O'Hanlon

                                  1 Reply Last reply
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                                  • Richard Andrew x64R Richard Andrew x64

                                    What do you think of this guy's opinion? He is Allen Holub from Holub.com http://www.sdtimes.com/fullcolumn/column-20060901-05.html[^] "XML is perhaps the worst programming language ever conceived. I’m not talking about XML as a data-description language, which was its original design. I’m talking about perverting XML for programming applications. It’s inappropriate to use XML as a scripting language (e.g., ANT), a test-description language (e.g., TestNG), an object-relational mapping language (e.g., Hibernate, JDO), a control-flow language (e.g., JSF), and so forth. These sorts of XML “programs” are unreadable, unmaintainable, an order of magnitude larger than necessary, and audaciously inefficient at runtime."

                                    -------------------------------- "All that is necessary for the forces of evil to win in the world is for enough good men to do nothing" -- Edmund Burke

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                                    H Offline
                                    HacksawJones
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #62

                                    Ok. Didn't like the shot at C++ but he's right. I've seen a little XML in my brief time with web programming and it seems like a nice way to organize some data but for programming something? No way. That would be like going back to assembler and what programmer needs that headache. Object oriented Java based or C++ based are two of the best ways to program. His point about compiler knowledge is an excellent point as well. Sounds to me like Microsoft is making a move to drop support for something while they are getting ready to push a new product onto the market. Sigh, just wish you guys would just stop doing that. A programmers GUI for writing a program? Been there with large scale mainframes and nine times out of ten you have to go back and adjust or completely recode the stuff anyways to get what your business partners want. Using a scripting language to program? Good for presentation, bad for system architecture. And that's my two-cents. :->

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                                    • D deostroll

                                      Is the win32 platform going obsolete? Is it being replaced by the dotnet framework or something like that?

                                      R Offline
                                      R Offline
                                      Ravi Bhavnani
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #63

                                      I'll take a stab at answering your question in a (hopefully) objective and useful manner. The .NET framework (like MFC) is layered on top of the Win32 API, which is itself implemented as a collection of dlls that make up the Windows operating system. So it seems unlikely that Win32 will disappear in the near future. If you're selecting a Windows technology to learn - or one in which to implement a new product, you're better off using .NET or MFC instead of the Win32 API. Given a choice, I would definitely select .NET. After programming in MFC for 14 years, I find the functionality provided by the .NET framework to be orders of magnitude richer. Note, you can't (yet) do absolutely everything in .NET - you may still need to occasionally call out to a Win32 API, and that's what P/Invoke[^] is for. Hope this helps. /ravi

                                      This is your brain on Celcius Home | Music | Articles | Freeware | Trips ravib(at)ravib(dot)com

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                                      • P Perspx

                                        Career? Haha.. I'm 14 so programming isn't my career :p And I don't see why .NET would take off..? It's a Microsoft product, and the user has to download the framework for .NET applications to run.. --PerspX

                                        "Nowadays, security guys break the Mac every single day. Every single day, they come out with a total exploit, your machine can be taken over totally. I dare anybody to do that once a month on the Windows machine." - Bill Gates

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                                        NormDroid
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #64

                                        Perspx wrote:

                                        I'm 14 so programming

                                        Stop aking stupid questions then.

                                        Perspx wrote:

                                        And I don't see why .NET would take off..?

                                        .net has taken off, actually then demend for jobs in .net development out strip other jobs.

                                        Perspx wrote:

                                        and the user has to download the framework for .NET applications to run

                                        Vista is shipped with .net 3.0, most machines connected to the internet will receive .net 1.1, .net 2.0 through autoupdates. And to deploy .net accross a windows domains takes under a minute. So if you don't like .net, go to java some genre just bad tools to develop with.

                                        Roger Irrelevant "he's completely hatstand"

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                                        • R realJSOP

                                          It most certainly wasn't a "mad rush". Further, the job includes C++ and even a little PHP. I'm certainly expanding my skillset, but I still consider myself to be a C++ programmer first and foremost. Lastly, I may be working in C#/.Net, but you should never assume for even a fraction of a second that my personal view regarding .Net has changed in even the slightest of measurements.

                                          "Why don't you tie a kerosene-soaked rag around your ankles so the ants won't climb up and eat your candy ass..." - Dale Earnhardt, 1997
                                          -----
                                          "...the staggering layers of obscenity in your statement make it a work of art on so many levels." - Jason Jystad, 10/26/2001

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                                          N Offline
                                          NormDroid
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #65

                                          We'll see in about 1 year ;)

                                          Roger Irrelevant "he's completely hatstand"

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