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ok, and nice quote. I use VB 6 because i am a beginner and find it easy, once i get better at coding i will use C++ or soming along those lines. What language are you best with?
Benjamin Dodd
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ok, and nice quote. I use VB 6 because i am a beginner and find it easy, once i get better at coding i will use C++ or soming along those lines. What language are you best with?
Benjamin Dodd
Benjamin Dodd wrote:
I use VB 6 because i am a beginner and find it easy
Just go to VB.NET. VB6 is no longer supported.
Benjamin Dodd wrote:
What language are you best with?
C++/C#/Java/PHP/Perl/Fortran/VB.NET/Assembly (80x86, 6502), just to name a few ;P Take note of my other sig at the bottom :-D
"Any sort of work in VB6 is bound to provide several WTF moments." - Christian Graus
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Benjamin Dodd wrote:
I use VB 6 because i am a beginner and find it easy
Just go to VB.NET. VB6 is no longer supported.
Benjamin Dodd wrote:
What language are you best with?
C++/C#/Java/PHP/Perl/Fortran/VB.NET/Assembly (80x86, 6502), just to name a few ;P Take note of my other sig at the bottom :-D
"Any sort of work in VB6 is bound to provide several WTF moments." - Christian Graus
haha :( i jus bought the VB 6 book, :( and that comment is not funny haha, you are a Genius hehe, you know lots of languages, im only 16, what do u suggest i use to program, i used C++ some time ago i have the books for that. Just found it a bit ahrd after a while. Any suggestions
Benjamin Dodd
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haha :( i jus bought the VB 6 book, :( and that comment is not funny haha, you are a Genius hehe, you know lots of languages, im only 16, what do u suggest i use to program, i used C++ some time ago i have the books for that. Just found it a bit ahrd after a while. Any suggestions
Benjamin Dodd
Benjamin Dodd wrote:
you know lots of languages
Awww, shucks :) I started programming when I was 9 and that was almost 26 years ago. Since you just got a VB6 book, carry on. I'd get the fundamentals down, and move on to C++/C#.
Benjamin Dodd wrote:
ust found it a bit ahrd after a while
What is so hard about C++? Object Oriented Programming? MFC?
"The early bird may get the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese" - anonymous, found in Uncle John's Bathroom Reader
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Benjamin Dodd wrote:
you know lots of languages
Awww, shucks :) I started programming when I was 9 and that was almost 26 years ago. Since you just got a VB6 book, carry on. I'd get the fundamentals down, and move on to C++/C#.
Benjamin Dodd wrote:
ust found it a bit ahrd after a while
What is so hard about C++? Object Oriented Programming? MFC?
"The early bird may get the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese" - anonymous, found in Uncle John's Bathroom Reader
ok, wow you started at 9, thats real early :) i started at 15, and i was doind ok with c++ just wasn`t understanding the codes very well and when i got to the secong chapter in my book, variables and strings i was confused however another read i may understand it more, because at this time i was taking my GCSEs so it wernt the best time to fill my head with new knoledge, i will read 'C++ in easy steps' a bit tomorro, maybe i will get a better understanding of it. I will contiue with VB 6 however because i have the book hehe. What was the first language u got familier with?
Benjamin Dodd
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ok, wow you started at 9, thats real early :) i started at 15, and i was doind ok with c++ just wasn`t understanding the codes very well and when i got to the secong chapter in my book, variables and strings i was confused however another read i may understand it more, because at this time i was taking my GCSEs so it wernt the best time to fill my head with new knoledge, i will read 'C++ in easy steps' a bit tomorro, maybe i will get a better understanding of it. I will contiue with VB 6 however because i have the book hehe. What was the first language u got familier with?
Benjamin Dodd
Here's the chronological order I went with: First actual language I became familiar with was the built in Basic that came with the Commodore 64/128 systems. From there, I went on to learning assembly language for the 6502 chip which the C64/128 ran on. After that, I upgraded to my first Intel based machine in 1991, a 386 running at 25mhz, and it was a significant leap from the C64/128. Did a quick stint with Quick Basic 4.5/VB 1.0 (never really looked at VB again until VB.NET showed up), with some Microsoft Pascal. Started at the local community college in 1992, learning Ada (at the time concurrently C++). Java came around a while later, along with PHP. Started with C# around 2002, or so, and that has been pretty much the language of choice, unless clients dictate otherwise.
"The early bird may get the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese" - anonymous, found in Uncle John's Bathroom Reader
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Here's the chronological order I went with: First actual language I became familiar with was the built in Basic that came with the Commodore 64/128 systems. From there, I went on to learning assembly language for the 6502 chip which the C64/128 ran on. After that, I upgraded to my first Intel based machine in 1991, a 386 running at 25mhz, and it was a significant leap from the C64/128. Did a quick stint with Quick Basic 4.5/VB 1.0 (never really looked at VB again until VB.NET showed up), with some Microsoft Pascal. Started at the local community college in 1992, learning Ada (at the time concurrently C++). Java came around a while later, along with PHP. Started with C# around 2002, or so, and that has been pretty much the language of choice, unless clients dictate otherwise.
"The early bird may get the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese" - anonymous, found in Uncle John's Bathroom Reader
ok wow thats alot, i have used BASIC before when i installed it in school haha, it was quite good however went swiftly on to VB 2005 express edition then i couldnt get the book for that version, so i switched to VB 6, and before BASIC me and a friends used to use C++ in school to make .exe files and just play around with C++ really, thanks for your help i will contiuse with VB 6 however at the same time i shall learn C++. I hope i have more luck with C++ this time around haha i'm sure doing a level math will help me with this I want to learn at least 5 programming languages before i die hehe This is including JAVA whith at the moment i know nothing about.
Benjamin Dodd
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ok, wow you started at 9, thats real early :) i started at 15, and i was doind ok with c++ just wasn`t understanding the codes very well and when i got to the secong chapter in my book, variables and strings i was confused however another read i may understand it more, because at this time i was taking my GCSEs so it wernt the best time to fill my head with new knoledge, i will read 'C++ in easy steps' a bit tomorro, maybe i will get a better understanding of it. I will contiue with VB 6 however because i have the book hehe. What was the first language u got familier with?
Benjamin Dodd
Hi, don't waste your time on an old language such as VB6. If you study the ancient books you seem to own, you will be old before you get to the current stuff, and it will not increase your market value. Don't let the accidental book take the decisions for you... I would go for C#: modern language, fully object oriented, more powerful than VB.NET, less hassle than managed C++, offers all the powers .NET provides. So I suggest you buy one introductory book on C# and study it thoroughly, download Visual Studio C# Express Edition (it is free), and read some CodeProject articles. :)
Luc Pattyn
try { [Search CP Articles] [Search CP Forums] [Forum Guidelines] [My Articles] } catch { [Google] }
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Hi, don't waste your time on an old language such as VB6. If you study the ancient books you seem to own, you will be old before you get to the current stuff, and it will not increase your market value. Don't let the accidental book take the decisions for you... I would go for C#: modern language, fully object oriented, more powerful than VB.NET, less hassle than managed C++, offers all the powers .NET provides. So I suggest you buy one introductory book on C# and study it thoroughly, download Visual Studio C# Express Edition (it is free), and read some CodeProject articles. :)
Luc Pattyn
try { [Search CP Articles] [Search CP Forums] [Forum Guidelines] [My Articles] } catch { [Google] }
Hi, thanks for your comment, my books are quite old hehe because i buy them second-hand cheep. Thanks, i will download C# tomorro and get a book from the libary to introduce me to it. Thanks for your help :):)
Benjamin Dodd
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Hi, don't waste your time on an old language such as VB6. If you study the ancient books you seem to own, you will be old before you get to the current stuff, and it will not increase your market value. Don't let the accidental book take the decisions for you... I would go for C#: modern language, fully object oriented, more powerful than VB.NET, less hassle than managed C++, offers all the powers .NET provides. So I suggest you buy one introductory book on C# and study it thoroughly, download Visual Studio C# Express Edition (it is free), and read some CodeProject articles. :)
Luc Pattyn
try { [Search CP Articles] [Search CP Forums] [Forum Guidelines] [My Articles] } catch { [Google] }
Luc Pattyn wrote:
don't waste your time on an old language such as VB6
Been trying to tell him :)
"The early bird may get the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese" - anonymous, found in Uncle John's Bathroom Reader
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ok wow thats alot, i have used BASIC before when i installed it in school haha, it was quite good however went swiftly on to VB 2005 express edition then i couldnt get the book for that version, so i switched to VB 6, and before BASIC me and a friends used to use C++ in school to make .exe files and just play around with C++ really, thanks for your help i will contiuse with VB 6 however at the same time i shall learn C++. I hope i have more luck with C++ this time around haha i'm sure doing a level math will help me with this I want to learn at least 5 programming languages before i die hehe This is including JAVA whith at the moment i know nothing about.
Benjamin Dodd
Benjamin Dodd wrote:
I want to learn at least 5 programming languages before i die
Once you've got a few languages under your belt, then learning more is actually pretty easy once the the fundamentals are down pat :)
"The early bird may get the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese" - anonymous, found in Uncle John's Bathroom Reader
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Luc Pattyn wrote:
don't waste your time on an old language such as VB6
Been trying to tell him :)
"The early bird may get the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese" - anonymous, found in Uncle John's Bathroom Reader
haha thanks everyone, you are great helps, so i will start with C# tomorro
Benjamin Dodd
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haha thanks everyone, you are great helps, so i will start with C# tomorro
Benjamin Dodd
What type of applications can be made in C# i have heard about this language, it is really advanced, does anyone have experience with this language??
Benjamin Dodd
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Luc Pattyn wrote:
don't waste your time on an old language such as VB6
Been trying to tell him :)
"The early bird may get the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese" - anonymous, found in Uncle John's Bathroom Reader
Paul Conrad wrote:
trying
just a little bit of psychology is all that was required :-D
Luc Pattyn
try { [Search CP Articles] [Search CP Forums] [Forum Guidelines] [My Articles] } catch { [Google] }
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What type of applications can be made in C# i have heard about this language, it is really advanced, does anyone have experience with this language??
Benjamin Dodd
Hi, The number of messages in the C# forum far exceeds the number in the VB forum. That may indicate there are more people interested, more application possible, but also more questions, or maybe more problems. I suggest you read some of the messages and make up your own mind on this. I for one have been using just C# (and plain C for native stuff) since I started using .NET, although I have been using VB long long ago. And yes I do read messages in other forums too, most problems are not really language specific anyway. :)
Luc Pattyn
try { [Search CP Articles] [Search CP Forums] [Forum Guidelines] [My Articles] } catch { [Google] }
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Hi, The number of messages in the C# forum far exceeds the number in the VB forum. That may indicate there are more people interested, more application possible, but also more questions, or maybe more problems. I suggest you read some of the messages and make up your own mind on this. I for one have been using just C# (and plain C for native stuff) since I started using .NET, although I have been using VB long long ago. And yes I do read messages in other forums too, most problems are not really language specific anyway. :)
Luc Pattyn
try { [Search CP Articles] [Search CP Forums] [Forum Guidelines] [My Articles] } catch { [Google] }
ok thank you, ill go in the other forum later, i came in this one to ask about VB 6. Thanks
Benjamin Dodd
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What type of applications can be made in C# i have heard about this language, it is really advanced, does anyone have experience with this language??
Benjamin Dodd
Benjamin Dodd wrote:
What type of applications can be made in C# i have heard about this language
Just about any as in any other language.
Benjamin Dodd wrote:
it is really advanced
Nahhh, it's pretty straightforward. Advanced for a beginner like yourself, but the marketable skill set you get from it is far better than VB6 :rolleyes:
"The early bird may get the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese" - anonymous, found in Uncle John's Bathroom Reader
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ok, and nice quote. I use VB 6 because i am a beginner and find it easy, once i get better at coding i will use C++ or soming along those lines. What language are you best with?
Benjamin Dodd
VB 6 is infinitely more of a pain to learn compared to vb.net. And by learning vb6 you will be learning methods that are out of date. Many coding practices are now spread across the board for languages because they all use the .net framework. That said, vb.net basically uses syntax to call bits of C++. So VB.net is a great stepping stone to more complex languages.
Please check out my articles: The ANZAC's articles
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haha :( i jus bought the VB 6 book, :( and that comment is not funny haha, you are a Genius hehe, you know lots of languages, im only 16, what do u suggest i use to program, i used C++ some time ago i have the books for that. Just found it a bit ahrd after a while. Any suggestions
Benjamin Dodd
Benjamin Dodd wrote:
that comment is not funny
Actually, it is very funny. You are just upset because you made a wrong choice and it cost you money. We all do that from time-to-time. Get over it. It won't be the last time that happens. Heck the worst choice I ever made cost me £25K ($50K US) so just be glad it only cost you the price of an out-of-date book.
Benjamin Dodd wrote:
you know lots of languages, im only 16
At 16 I'd been programming for 7 years. A better argument would have been length of time writing software. And, you did ask what programming languages people knew, so you had to expect some sort of answer like that. For the record my answer would be: Basic, Comal, Cobol, C, C++, Magik, SQL, C#, VB.NET. And a whole host of other languages I've long since forgotten because they've become obsolete or I just don't use them.
Benjamin Dodd wrote:
i used C++ some time ago i have the books for that. Just found it a bit ahrd after a while
C++ is quite hard compared to any flavour of basic becuase it is closer to the machine, so you have to think more like the machine does.
Upcoming events: * Glasgow: Mock Objects, SQL Server CLR Integration, Reporting Services, db4o, Dependency Injection with Spring ... "I wouldn't say boo to a goose. I'm not a coward, I just realise that it would be largely pointless." My website
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Benjamin Dodd wrote:
you know lots of languages
Awww, shucks :) I started programming when I was 9 and that was almost 26 years ago. Since you just got a VB6 book, carry on. I'd get the fundamentals down, and move on to C++/C#.
Benjamin Dodd wrote:
ust found it a bit ahrd after a while
What is so hard about C++? Object Oriented Programming? MFC?
"The early bird may get the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese" - anonymous, found in Uncle John's Bathroom Reader
Paul Conrad wrote:
I started programming when I was 9
Hey! Me too!!! :-D
Upcoming events: * Glasgow: Mock Objects, SQL Server CLR Integration, Reporting Services, db4o, Dependency Injection with Spring ... "I wouldn't say boo to a goose. I'm not a coward, I just realise that it would be largely pointless." My website