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  3. .NET file size? *RANT*

.NET file size? *RANT*

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  • H HomeNuke

    **Begin RANT** Man, I was in for a shock my friend just gave me an app, his first in C#, and the setup file was like 20-30Megs in size? This thing only had a couple of forms. Is this true? This is my one reason I write code that I distro off my website in straight C Win32API the file size is way smaller. This can't be true can it? Someone please tell me he messed something up while creating the distro... This would totally defeat the purpose of distro files over the NET if the setup files total 20-30 megs for a couple of forms???? Sheesh... **END RANT** HomeNuke ---- "Nuke'd Your Home, Yet?" Run your own PostNuke based web server from home http://www.homenuke.com

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    Mark A
    wrote on last edited by
    #8

    C# doesnt cater to small desktop applications well at all. C# for small desktop applications is like using a rocket engine to get a kite off the ground.

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    • M Mark A

      C# doesnt cater to small desktop applications well at all. C# for small desktop applications is like using a rocket engine to get a kite off the ground.

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      Ryan Johnston 0
      wrote on last edited by
      #9

      Mark A wrote: using a rocket engine to get a kite off the ground But that would be really cool to see.

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      • M Mark A

        C# doesnt cater to small desktop applications well at all. C# for small desktop applications is like using a rocket engine to get a kite off the ground.

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        Eddie Velasquez
        wrote on last edited by
        #10

        Mark A wrote: C# doesnt cater to small desktop applications well at all. C# for small desktop applications is like using a rocket engine to get a kite off the ground. Right now you're probably right, but in a year or two the .NET runtime will be as readily available in every desktop as shell32.dll, user32.dll or gdi32.dll.


        Eddie Velasquez: A Squeezed Devil
        Checkout General Guidelines for C# Class Implementation

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        • E Eddie Velasquez

          Mark A wrote: C# doesnt cater to small desktop applications well at all. C# for small desktop applications is like using a rocket engine to get a kite off the ground. Right now you're probably right, but in a year or two the .NET runtime will be as readily available in every desktop as shell32.dll, user32.dll or gdi32.dll.


          Eddie Velasquez: A Squeezed Devil
          Checkout General Guidelines for C# Class Implementation

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          ColinDavies
          wrote on last edited by
          #11

          Eddie Velasquez wrote: Right now you're probably right, but in a year or two the .NET runtime will be as readily available in every desktop as shell32.dll, user32.dll or gdi32.dll. How do uop come that conclusion Eddie ? just curious. Regardz Colin J Davies

          Sonork ID 100.9197:Colin

          I am sick of fighting with Martin, I think I will ignore his posts from here on in, and spend the time working on articles instead. Christian Graus

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          • C ColinDavies

            Eddie Velasquez wrote: Right now you're probably right, but in a year or two the .NET runtime will be as readily available in every desktop as shell32.dll, user32.dll or gdi32.dll. How do uop come that conclusion Eddie ? just curious. Regardz Colin J Davies

            Sonork ID 100.9197:Colin

            I am sick of fighting with Martin, I think I will ignore his posts from here on in, and spend the time working on articles instead. Christian Graus

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            Eddie Velasquez
            wrote on last edited by
            #12

            Colin Davies wrote: How do uop come that conclusion Eddie Well, service packs, upgrades, etc. The adoption of (and transition to) .NET (the new "Win32": in the sense of a bunch dlls that make up the os) will be faster (IMO) than that of Win32 from Win16 and from DOS to Win16. Why? Well internet makes a hell of a difference!


            Eddie Velasquez: A Squeezed Devil
            Checkout General Guidelines for C# Class Implementation

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            • E Eddie Velasquez

              Colin Davies wrote: How do uop come that conclusion Eddie Well, service packs, upgrades, etc. The adoption of (and transition to) .NET (the new "Win32": in the sense of a bunch dlls that make up the os) will be faster (IMO) than that of Win32 from Win16 and from DOS to Win16. Why? Well internet makes a hell of a difference!


              Eddie Velasquez: A Squeezed Devil
              Checkout General Guidelines for C# Class Implementation

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              ColinDavies
              wrote on last edited by
              #13

              I'm wondering, how long it will take for popular Net apps to appear. I don't even think its included in XP yet ? [ unsure ] And I haven't seen a big push by MS to flood the bandwidth with it yet. I really think its going to trickle onto PC's over the next few years. Anyhow, Lets arrange to discuss this on 19/July/2003 :-) Regardz Colin J Davies

              Sonork ID 100.9197:Colin

              I am sick of fighting with Martin, I think I will ignore his posts from here on in, and spend the time working on articles instead. Christian Graus

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              • C ColinDavies

                I'm wondering, how long it will take for popular Net apps to appear. I don't even think its included in XP yet ? [ unsure ] And I haven't seen a big push by MS to flood the bandwidth with it yet. I really think its going to trickle onto PC's over the next few years. Anyhow, Lets arrange to discuss this on 19/July/2003 :-) Regardz Colin J Davies

                Sonork ID 100.9197:Colin

                I am sick of fighting with Martin, I think I will ignore his posts from here on in, and spend the time working on articles instead. Christian Graus

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                Eddie Velasquez
                wrote on last edited by
                #14

                Colin Davies wrote: don't even think its included in XP yet I think it will be included in SP1. Colin Davies wrote: I'm wondering, how long it will take for popular Net apps to appear. I remember when I wondered how long it would take for popular Win32 apps to appear. :) I think it will be pretty soon, at least compared with the Win16 and Win32 adoption rate.


                Eddie Velasquez: A Squeezed Devil
                Checkout General Guidelines for C# Class Implementation

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                • E Eddie Velasquez

                  Colin Davies wrote: don't even think its included in XP yet I think it will be included in SP1. Colin Davies wrote: I'm wondering, how long it will take for popular Net apps to appear. I remember when I wondered how long it would take for popular Win32 apps to appear. :) I think it will be pretty soon, at least compared with the Win16 and Win32 adoption rate.


                  Eddie Velasquez: A Squeezed Devil
                  Checkout General Guidelines for C# Class Implementation

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                  ColinDavies
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #15

                  Yes, that makes me think about how "ready" .NET is for a 64 bit OS. I guess thats at the compiler level rather than Intermediate Language level. Regardz Colin J Davies

                  Sonork ID 100.9197:Colin

                  I am sick of fighting with Martin, I think I will ignore his posts from here on in, and spend the time working on articles instead. Christian Graus

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                  • T Troy Marchand

                    He must be including the .NET run-time along with the app. Actually .NET applications are generally quite a bit smaller than C++ apps (with the same functionality).

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                    Gerald Schwab
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #16

                    Actually, thier about the same as long as you don't statically compile with the CRT in your C++ apps. I frequently compile with the ATL library and some of my smaller exe's are only about 4K.

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                    • C ColinDavies

                      Yes, that makes me think about how "ready" .NET is for a 64 bit OS. I guess thats at the compiler level rather than Intermediate Language level. Regardz Colin J Davies

                      Sonork ID 100.9197:Colin

                      I am sick of fighting with Martin, I think I will ignore his posts from here on in, and spend the time working on articles instead. Christian Graus

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                      James T Johnson
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #17

                      The only type that is bit sensitive would be IntPtr, and it was built to handle that change. The CTS has defined types so that they are strict, unlike C/C++ where only a relation is held between them. Some types defined by the CTS are Int16, Int32, Int64; I think we can all tell what the numbers mean :) While the CTS is 64 bit ready; the CLR is not. Currently there is no 64bit implementation of the CLR; not to say that there won't be there just isn't one yet. James "Java is free - and worth every penny." - Christian Graus

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                      • E Eddie Velasquez

                        Mark A wrote: C# doesnt cater to small desktop applications well at all. C# for small desktop applications is like using a rocket engine to get a kite off the ground. Right now you're probably right, but in a year or two the .NET runtime will be as readily available in every desktop as shell32.dll, user32.dll or gdi32.dll.


                        Eddie Velasquez: A Squeezed Devil
                        Checkout General Guidelines for C# Class Implementation

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                        Code4Food
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #18

                        Eddie Velasquez wrote: Right now you're probably right, but in a year or two the .NET runtime will be as readily available in every desktop as shell32.dll, user32.dll or gdi32.dll. Yeah but if they keep changing it like MFC then we have to distro apps with that anyways like I do now with MFC42 :( Code4Food ---- "There is no try; only do or do not" -Yoda

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                        • P peterchen

                          Sounds like the setup had the .NET RunTime included.


                          You don't need to sleep to see a nightmare  Anne Clark   [sighist]

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                          Code4Food
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #19

                          So we don't need to include the .NET runtime? Everytime I build an install I include the crazy MFC24 DLL (if I used MFC) I don't think most systems will have .NET installed on them yet. Code4Food ---- "There is no try; only do or do not" -Yoda

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                          • B Bruce Duncan

                            His setup included the .NET runtime or CLR, which is 20-25mb (I think...) This is only necessary if the target system does not already have it installed. (Which is probably most systems currently.)

                            Bruce Duncan, CP#9088, CPUA 0xA1EE, Sonork 100.10030
                            Arthur-Anderson, proud sponsor of the Corporate Make A Wish Foundation.

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                            Code4Food
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #20

                            Bruce Duncan wrote: (Which is probably most systems currently.) Beat me to saying it :) I to believe most systems don't have .NET yet and the ones that do are development systems :( Code4Food ---- "There is no try; only do or do not" -Yoda

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                            • C Code4Food

                              Eddie Velasquez wrote: Right now you're probably right, but in a year or two the .NET runtime will be as readily available in every desktop as shell32.dll, user32.dll or gdi32.dll. Yeah but if they keep changing it like MFC then we have to distro apps with that anyways like I do now with MFC42 :( Code4Food ---- "There is no try; only do or do not" -Yoda

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                              Eddie Velasquez
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #21

                              Code4Food wrote: Yeah but if they keep changing it like MFC then we have to distro apps with that anyways like I do now with MFC42 .NET's builtin versioning of assemblies prevents this scenario (bye, bye dll hell)


                              Eddie Velasquez: A Squeezed Devil
                              Checkout General Guidelines for C# Class Implementation

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                              • E Eddie Velasquez

                                Code4Food wrote: Yeah but if they keep changing it like MFC then we have to distro apps with that anyways like I do now with MFC42 .NET's builtin versioning of assemblies prevents this scenario (bye, bye dll hell)


                                Eddie Velasquez: A Squeezed Devil
                                Checkout General Guidelines for C# Class Implementation

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                                Code4Food
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #22

                                That sounds good what about the fact that people can decompile your code/dll? Are they going to solve that? Code4Food ---- "There is no try; only do or do not" -Yoda

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                                • C Code4Food

                                  So we don't need to include the .NET runtime? Everytime I build an install I include the crazy MFC24 DLL (if I used MFC) I don't think most systems will have .NET installed on them yet. Code4Food ---- "There is no try; only do or do not" -Yoda

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                                  peterchen
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #23

                                  rememebr that the .NET runtime is, does and replaces much more than just MFC + VCRT. Yes, it's like bundling the entire system32 directory. We all hope that it#s getting better.


                                  You don't need to sleep to see a nightmare  Anne Clark   [sighist]

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                                  • C Code4Food

                                    That sounds good what about the fact that people can decompile your code/dll? Are they going to solve that? Code4Food ---- "There is no try; only do or do not" -Yoda

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                                    Eddie Velasquez
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #24

                                    Well, there are pretty good decompilers for native code (granted, the output isn't as nearly as complete as an IL decompilation) and that hasn't stopped development. There are superb Java decompilers and that hasn't stopped java development either. There are good .NET obfuscators that will deter most reverse engineering, but if your code is so sensitive it shouldn't be out there anyway, expose it as a web service or something.


                                    Eddie Velasquez: A Squeezed Devil
                                    Checkout General Guidelines for C# Class Implementation

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