New Hope for VC++ Devs
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Pete O'Hanlon wrote:
I hate to tell them that 10 is the new 6 only if you've invented a new numbering system
Base 6: 10base6==6base10
_________________________ 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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norm .net wrote:
LOL! c# and plenty of OS knowledge bangs $120,000 at your door
I'll see your and raise 38k
_________________________ Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau. Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)
OK, that's the limit, but considering C++ was the... lets say to caviar of languages (I've done a 12+ year stint), C# is more a delicate taste, well niche is good and when the golden years are dawning on me, I'll be commanding a rich salary for C++/MFC/Win32/ATL and of course COM!!!
WPF - Imagineers Wanted Follow your nose using DoubleAnimationUsingPath
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OK, that's the limit, but considering C++ was the... lets say to caviar of languages (I've done a 12+ year stint), C# is more a delicate taste, well niche is good and when the golden years are dawning on me, I'll be commanding a rich salary for C++/MFC/Win32/ATL and of course COM!!!
WPF - Imagineers Wanted Follow your nose using DoubleAnimationUsingPath
C++ will change just as C# has. It already is doing so. With new features being rolled in and people already using many of them the language is still growing. There are still those who desire speed over allowing everyone to see your code. Especially those with something of a security concern. Not that anyone's employer's around here actually care about that... ;) "managed" code has its pros and cons, and some of those pros to one person are a con to another. There are some things I would not be allowed to write in C#, end of story even if I wanted. It wouldn't be a preference either, it would be security concern in which case the choice is not mine to make. Next year will be interesting... with two 90K plus income streams active.... Hey, I don't mind, everyone else can go to C#. I don't mind at all now. Leaves more $ for me. So please, please, stay in C#. In fact, I encourage everyone now to go to C# here. I don't mind in the least.
_________________________ 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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OK, that's the limit, but considering C++ was the... lets say to caviar of languages (I've done a 12+ year stint), C# is more a delicate taste, well niche is good and when the golden years are dawning on me, I'll be commanding a rich salary for C++/MFC/Win32/ATL and of course COM!!!
WPF - Imagineers Wanted Follow your nose using DoubleAnimationUsingPath
How many lines of COBOL are being written every day? How many NEW COBOL programmers are there? One day there will be old systems and no developers! Same will happen with C++ and C# Soon we will just talk to our computers, like Orac! :)
------------------------------------ I try to appear cooler, by calling him Euler.
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C++ will change just as C# has. It already is doing so. With new features being rolled in and people already using many of them the language is still growing. There are still those who desire speed over allowing everyone to see your code. Especially those with something of a security concern. Not that anyone's employer's around here actually care about that... ;) "managed" code has its pros and cons, and some of those pros to one person are a con to another. There are some things I would not be allowed to write in C#, end of story even if I wanted. It wouldn't be a preference either, it would be security concern in which case the choice is not mine to make. Next year will be interesting... with two 90K plus income streams active.... Hey, I don't mind, everyone else can go to C#. I don't mind at all now. Leaves more $ for me. So please, please, stay in C#. In fact, I encourage everyone now to go to C# here. I don't mind in the least.
_________________________ Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau. Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)
El Corazon wrote:
I encourage everyone now to go to C# here.
No.
Mark Salsbery Microsoft MVP - Visual C++ :java:
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VC++ Team Blog[^] > IMHO, Microsoft did a great job in improving the > C++ compiler since VC6 age. I don't like very much > the VC6 C++ compiler, but I do love the VC6 IDE! You and everyone else on the planet, as far as I can tell! :-) The IDE team has definitely gotten your feedback, and they're working hard to make VC10's IDE better. We recently got T-shirts with the slogan "10 is the new 6", heh.
Kevin
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What's C++ again? :) , it's going to be tough times ahead for C++, it's definitely goning to become a niche language like ASM.
WPF - Imagineers Wanted Follow your nose using DoubleAnimationUsingPath
Don't mind the low voters, they are people who were once wide eyed and optimistic, knew and understood and accepted that this business is built on change, then they became bitter and jaded and cling to the past like it's a life preserver in open waters.
When everyone is a hero no one is a hero.
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Don't mind the low voters, they are people who were once wide eyed and optimistic, knew and understood and accepted that this business is built on change, then they became bitter and jaded and cling to the past like it's a life preserver in open waters.
When everyone is a hero no one is a hero.
They are the sort that learnt BASIC on a ZX Spectrum or maybe a BBC and still program like that. Oh God... It's Me! Arrrrggghhh!!!!
------------------------------------ I try to appear cooler, by calling him Euler.
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C++ will change just as C# has. It already is doing so. With new features being rolled in and people already using many of them the language is still growing. There are still those who desire speed over allowing everyone to see your code. Especially those with something of a security concern. Not that anyone's employer's around here actually care about that... ;) "managed" code has its pros and cons, and some of those pros to one person are a con to another. There are some things I would not be allowed to write in C#, end of story even if I wanted. It wouldn't be a preference either, it would be security concern in which case the choice is not mine to make. Next year will be interesting... with two 90K plus income streams active.... Hey, I don't mind, everyone else can go to C#. I don't mind at all now. Leaves more $ for me. So please, please, stay in C#. In fact, I encourage everyone now to go to C# here. I don't mind in the least.
_________________________ Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau. Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)
El Corazon wrote:
There are some things I would not be allowed to write in C#, end of story even if I wanted. It wouldn't be a preference either, it would be security concern
:rolleyes: Security through obscurity is no security at all. You know as well as most of us more ... experienced.. developers here that reverse engineering any executable ever created ranges from a snap for most to mildly difficult for even those that actively try to protect against it. Though I'm sure it's not your policy so you probably roll your eyes internally as well. :)
When everyone is a hero no one is a hero.
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They are the sort that learnt BASIC on a ZX Spectrum or maybe a BBC and still program like that. Oh God... It's Me! Arrrrggghhh!!!!
------------------------------------ I try to appear cooler, by calling him Euler.
My first language was 6809 assembly then basic on a Commodore SuperPet and I'm sure there are others that go back much further but in general great developers know enough to use the best tool for the job and 90% of the time that tool is no longer c++ but let them eat moldy old potatoes I say, I'll eat whatever the cake du jour is. :)
When everyone is a hero no one is a hero.
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My first language was 6809 assembly then basic on a Commodore SuperPet and I'm sure there are others that go back much further but in general great developers know enough to use the best tool for the job and 90% of the time that tool is no longer c++ but let them eat moldy old potatoes I say, I'll eat whatever the cake du jour is. :)
When everyone is a hero no one is a hero.
Well I am learning c# for now, not bad for a 40 year old accountant whose last IT job was sys op on an AS400
------------------------------------ I try to appear cooler, by calling him Euler.
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El Corazon wrote:
There are some things I would not be allowed to write in C#, end of story even if I wanted. It wouldn't be a preference either, it would be security concern
:rolleyes: Security through obscurity is no security at all. You know as well as most of us more ... experienced.. developers here that reverse engineering any executable ever created ranges from a snap for most to mildly difficult for even those that actively try to protect against it. Though I'm sure it's not your policy so you probably roll your eyes internally as well. :)
When everyone is a hero no one is a hero.
John C wrote:
Security through obscurity is no security at all.
hey, don't talk to me, talk to the man who declares encryption equal in danger to nuclear threats! ;P
_________________________ 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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El Corazon wrote:
I encourage everyone now to go to C# here.
No.
Mark Salsbery Microsoft MVP - Visual C++ :java:
Mark Salsbery wrote:
No.
darnit! competition.... :mad: ;P
_________________________ 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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How many lines of COBOL are being written every day? How many NEW COBOL programmers are there? One day there will be old systems and no developers! Same will happen with C++ and C# Soon we will just talk to our computers, like Orac! :)
------------------------------------ I try to appear cooler, by calling him Euler.
Dalek Dave wrote:
Soon we will just talk to our computers, like Orac!
If soon is written in about 100 years.... hey... programming language "SOON" there's an idea.... hmmmm....
_________________________ 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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My first language was 6809 assembly then basic on a Commodore SuperPet and I'm sure there are others that go back much further but in general great developers know enough to use the best tool for the job and 90% of the time that tool is no longer c++ but let them eat moldy old potatoes I say, I'll eat whatever the cake du jour is. :)
When everyone is a hero no one is a hero.
John C wrote:
and 90% of the time that tool is no longer c++ but let them eat moldy old potatoes I say
The difference is you act like that 10% doesn't exist... and doesn't command higher salaries.... but I don't mind... because it means more here. 3D is booming, and performance parallel 3D means the experts in the languages that count are commanding higher benefits. There are those trying to compete with C#, no problem. They spend 90% of their time scratching their head saying, "his numbers are impossible! I can't do that in C# so he can't either." No problem. that is why I get the contracts, and they don't. The demand may be shifting, but it has not shifted in some areas, and those areas are pushing outward and reexpanding that 10%. Multi-process is still considered an art. the quest for a "magic bullet" has left many tools to command, and the desire for no knowledge of how to command them, thus no brains behind the actual use. The net result and loss of performance therein is a shift back to the experts who know how to do things right, not one way, but many ways. There is not one path, but many. You see one, with all other paths being ancient moldy potatoes. But your perception does not drive reality. Life was tougher last year, but in November that all changed. Ironically, and I never noticed that until just now, it was 6 years to the day (Nov 9) I almost died in the hospital. I'd say this last anniversary turned things around rather spectacularly.... it doubled the income streams with a minor shift in hours. hey, if I have to be paid twice the income for moldy potatoes, I'll take them. I have people clammering for more if I could provide it. Pity no one really wants to do moldy potatoes.... There is a lot more money than I can even earn there.
_________________________ 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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VC++ Team Blog[^] > IMHO, Microsoft did a great job in improving the > C++ compiler since VC6 age. I don't like very much > the VC6 C++ compiler, but I do love the VC6 IDE! You and everyone else on the planet, as far as I can tell! :-) The IDE team has definitely gotten your feedback, and they're working hard to make VC10's IDE better. We recently got T-shirts with the slogan "10 is the new 6", heh.
Kevin
once again another giant thread in the lounge about: who's salary is bigger (ha) and who's coding language is worse/better/older/newer/longer lasting (we all know it's spearmint)
----------------------------------------------------------- Completion Deadline: two days before the day after tomorrow
modified on Thursday, January 03, 2008 6:39:18 PM
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What's C++ again? :) , it's going to be tough times ahead for C++, it's definitely goning to become a niche language like ASM.
WPF - Imagineers Wanted Follow your nose using DoubleAnimationUsingPath
Enjoy your VB :)
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VC++ Team Blog[^] > IMHO, Microsoft did a great job in improving the > C++ compiler since VC6 age. I don't like very much > the VC6 C++ compiler, but I do love the VC6 IDE! You and everyone else on the planet, as far as I can tell! :-) The IDE team has definitely gotten your feedback, and they're working hard to make VC10's IDE better. We recently got T-shirts with the slogan "10 is the new 6", heh.
Kevin
Meh - after two years with Linux I don't really care about IDEs any more. Just need a good compiler, editor, libraries and a debugger. Anyway, it would be nice to be able to install only VC++ without all this .NET stuff.
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John C wrote:
and 90% of the time that tool is no longer c++ but let them eat moldy old potatoes I say
The difference is you act like that 10% doesn't exist... and doesn't command higher salaries.... but I don't mind... because it means more here. 3D is booming, and performance parallel 3D means the experts in the languages that count are commanding higher benefits. There are those trying to compete with C#, no problem. They spend 90% of their time scratching their head saying, "his numbers are impossible! I can't do that in C# so he can't either." No problem. that is why I get the contracts, and they don't. The demand may be shifting, but it has not shifted in some areas, and those areas are pushing outward and reexpanding that 10%. Multi-process is still considered an art. the quest for a "magic bullet" has left many tools to command, and the desire for no knowledge of how to command them, thus no brains behind the actual use. The net result and loss of performance therein is a shift back to the experts who know how to do things right, not one way, but many ways. There is not one path, but many. You see one, with all other paths being ancient moldy potatoes. But your perception does not drive reality. Life was tougher last year, but in November that all changed. Ironically, and I never noticed that until just now, it was 6 years to the day (Nov 9) I almost died in the hospital. I'd say this last anniversary turned things around rather spectacularly.... it doubled the income streams with a minor shift in hours. hey, if I have to be paid twice the income for moldy potatoes, I'll take them. I have people clammering for more if I could provide it. Pity no one really wants to do moldy potatoes.... There is a lot more money than I can even earn there.
_________________________ Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau. Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)
El Corazon wrote:
The difference is you act like that 10% doesn't exist
Oh I know it exists and I know that skilled, truly great developers can command any salary they wish in almost any language in the right circumstances. The sheer audacity and base ignorance of believing anything with absolute certainty is just plain funny and to me endlessly entertaining no matter how you slice it. ;) P.S. do you not see any irony and humour in the fact that my post just above yours advocated always using the best tool for the job and got voted down repeatedly? That's pure gold to me. Getting one votes from people that disagree with that is an honour. :)
When everyone is a hero no one is a hero.
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once again another giant thread in the lounge about: who's salary is bigger (ha) and who's coding language is worse/better/older/newer/longer lasting (we all know it's spearmint)
----------------------------------------------------------- Completion Deadline: two days before the day after tomorrow
modified on Thursday, January 03, 2008 6:39:18 PM
But that's just it, it's not really about either of those things when it comes down to it; it's common knowledge it's all about sexual reproduction and breadth and girth. ;) I've really got to stop stirring up the c++ crowd, they might hop in their horse drawn carriages and come after me with their flint lock's. :)
When everyone is a hero no one is a hero.