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  3. Should I learn ASP.NET, or go straight to MVC?

Should I learn ASP.NET, or go straight to MVC?

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  • J JHubSharp

    My own personal pet peeve, but I hate WCSF. I thik it and its cousin WSSF create extremely bloated solution files that ultimately do not produce faster results and do too much hand-holding for the developer.

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    Kevin McFarlane
    wrote on last edited by
    #12

    How does it compare with ASP.NET MVC? I've not used either of them although I did download WCSF a while back and have it sitting there gathering dust. :laugh:

    Kevin

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    • M martin_hughes

      Philip Laureano wrote:

      Actually, I was wondering if it would be more efficient to use command line build tools to enforce good coding standards. Since you're limited to managing a small subset of files at once, it forces you to keep your code compact and as manageable as possible. Perhaps using nant/msbuild, NUnit, and a good code generation engine would offset the need to use an IDE altogether (aside from the intellisense, and syntax highlighting, of course).

      More importantly, doing so forces the user to have a better understanding of what's really going on... rather than simply drawing buttons on a form and wiring up events and thinking "Hey, I'm a software developer!"

      Philip Laureano wrote:

      So the answer to your question really depends on how knowledgeable the developer is with whatever tool he/she is using for whatever problem is at hand.

      Ratio of bad developers (I'm in this camp :) ) to good developers (you can go in this one!): 100000/1. And yet there's still all that code to write!

      Top Secret Plan for World Domination

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      Kevin McFarlane
      wrote on last edited by
      #13

      martin_hughes wrote:

      More importantly, doing so forces the user to have a better understanding of what's really going on... rather than simply drawing buttons on a form and wiring up events and thinking "Hey, I'm a software developer!"

      My take on this is that designers, etc. are productivity tools. They're not substitutes for becoming a good developer. Once you learn what's going on without the tools why would you then continue without tools indefinitely? What purpose would it serve to, e.g., write all your WPF apps in raw XAML? It would be tedious, error-prone and expensive.

      Kevin

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      • K Kevin McFarlane

        martin_hughes wrote:

        More importantly, doing so forces the user to have a better understanding of what's really going on... rather than simply drawing buttons on a form and wiring up events and thinking "Hey, I'm a software developer!"

        My take on this is that designers, etc. are productivity tools. They're not substitutes for becoming a good developer. Once you learn what's going on without the tools why would you then continue without tools indefinitely? What purpose would it serve to, e.g., write all your WPF apps in raw XAML? It would be tedious, error-prone and expensive.

        Kevin

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        martin_hughes
        wrote on last edited by
        #14

        I agree, designers should be productivity tools... but for those who know how to do it the hard way! The problem I see is that a huge number of new developers know next to nothing about what goes on behind the scenes, and so are far less well equipped to actually understand how these things work. And yet... there is a clear need for people who are something else first and software developers second to write software, perhaps making use of intimate business knowledge or similar. To these people the actual plumbing and workings of compilers/patterns/objects/heaps/stacks and whatnot is secondary (or even tertiary) to solving the business problem at hand. In that respect the tools are not nearly good enough, as they should force good design on the "user" (let's call them users rather than developers)rather than leave them to their own devices.

        Top Secret Plan for World Domination

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        • K Kevin McFarlane

          How does it compare with ASP.NET MVC? I've not used either of them although I did download WCSF a while back and have it sitting there gathering dust. :laugh:

          Kevin

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          JHubSharp
          wrote on last edited by
          #15

          Well, it's not built like MVC. WCSF is still using the ASP.NET model, so I'd argue tht it's still pretty different from the MVC stuff that's in CTP/Beta at the moment (though to be fair I'm only familiar with MVC at a very high level). I didn't like WCSF becaue of its implementaton of PageFlow using WF (I think their implementation of PagFlow kind of sucks compared to what you can do with staright WF) and I don't ike having to create a project for every subfolder of your app...or was it every presenter? I forget, been about a year. I just thought it needlessly bloated the soluton forvery little benefit. It also confused the hell out of our junior devs, which seems to be the opposite of what a software factory should do. My 0.02.

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          • J JHubSharp

            Well, it's not built like MVC. WCSF is still using the ASP.NET model, so I'd argue tht it's still pretty different from the MVC stuff that's in CTP/Beta at the moment (though to be fair I'm only familiar with MVC at a very high level). I didn't like WCSF becaue of its implementaton of PageFlow using WF (I think their implementation of PagFlow kind of sucks compared to what you can do with staright WF) and I don't ike having to create a project for every subfolder of your app...or was it every presenter? I forget, been about a year. I just thought it needlessly bloated the soluton forvery little benefit. It also confused the hell out of our junior devs, which seems to be the opposite of what a software factory should do. My 0.02.

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            Kevin McFarlane
            wrote on last edited by
            #16

            Hmmm. I wonder if it will fade away when ASP.NET MVC goes gold?

            Kevin

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            • P Philip Laureano

              As a backend coder, I never really took the time to learn the frontend since I'm not really the artistic type, but now that I want to start writing web apps, I'm not sure which learning track I should follow when getting up to speed with web development. Should I start learning ASP.NET from scratch, or should I use the MVC to keep my code more simple? Which one is easier to learn in the shortest amount of time?

              Do you know...LinFu?

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              Gates VP
              wrote on last edited by
              #17

              OK, as the previous sub-thread discusses tool use, they've really hit on some of the big questions about these two technologies. Here is a http://www.hanselman.com/blog/CategoryView.aspx?category=ASP.NET+MVC[^]to Scott Hanselman's blog, with a category on MVC. There's a lot there, he and the many others still building MVC do quite a lot of blogging. That's worthy of note, MVC is still very new, in fact, they took feedback and went back to the drawing board like 4 times before its current version. So, on to the tough question. Why do you want to learn ASP.NET? For fun? For work? For a big project? Are you being paid? Here's my answer, YMMV. If you want to start small, you use ASP.NET. What it basically provides is a way to make Web Sites in the same basic ways you make Windows Apps. So if you drag a "button" control onto the web page canvas, it will create the relevant HTML, add the appropriate javascript and basically set you up with a working button in a matter of seconds. This is actually pretty cool, it abstracts a bunch of the Javascript! Honestly, you can build some pretty nice sites with little or no Javascript knowledge. Learn a little bit of CSS & HTML and you can make reasonable sites quickly with very little overhead. Use the AJAX libraries and you can make some pretty cool web apps very quickly. Here's the big caveat. As you dig deeper, the layer of abstraction breaks down. As the problems get more complex, you'll need to start learning Javascript, you'll need to know the dirty secrets of HTML and CSS. And I mean dirty, you'll look at stuff and say "Man, that's such a hack". We had a joke around the office that Javascript itself was basically "just a hack", but honestly, it works and it's quite powerful (just not always pretty :) But I'm not really answering your question ASP vs MVC. I'm getting there. You see, when I said that ASP.NET does some of the abstraction for you, well MVC actually takes away some of that abstraction! In fact, in some ways it resembles the much-maligned ASP classic. Why the "backwards change"? Well for one, it's easier to test. If you're building a web app with 20 other developers and 20 QA people, ASP.NET (no MVC) is kind of nightmarish to test. It doesn't really support unit tests, there's no clear separa

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              • P Philip Laureano

                As a backend coder, I never really took the time to learn the frontend since I'm not really the artistic type, but now that I want to start writing web apps, I'm not sure which learning track I should follow when getting up to speed with web development. Should I start learning ASP.NET from scratch, or should I use the MVC to keep my code more simple? Which one is easier to learn in the shortest amount of time?

                Do you know...LinFu?

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                TNCaver
                wrote on last edited by
                #18

                Ambiguous acronyms drive me crazy. They make me feel and look stupid when I have to ask about them. Please, what is this particular MVC you're all talking about? Wikipedia says it can mean the Model-View-Controller architecture, a MIVA script file or an operation in the instruction set of IBM's System/360 mainframe computers. The topic is web design, so that rules out the latter (I hope!). But somehow what you are all describing doesn't seem to fit the first two wiki entries, either.

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                • P Philip Laureano

                  As a backend coder, I never really took the time to learn the frontend since I'm not really the artistic type, but now that I want to start writing web apps, I'm not sure which learning track I should follow when getting up to speed with web development. Should I start learning ASP.NET from scratch, or should I use the MVC to keep my code more simple? Which one is easier to learn in the shortest amount of time?

                  Do you know...LinFu?

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                  kjmcsd
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #19

                  It's funny to see people talking about the MVC design pattern like it came out just yesterday. I know it's been around over 10 years years! Also it's a design pattern. ASP.NET is a technology. How do they relate? The only reason people are talking about it now because of Microsoft Marketing. You can argue separation of concerns and all that crap. It would be hard pressed for anyone to justify the value in using MVC over other patterns. What question was actually confusing but I get what the person is asking. My answer learn both. Like someone mentioned before, when learning ASP.NET make sure you fully grasp the page lifecycle stuff. Very important.

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                  • K kjmcsd

                    It's funny to see people talking about the MVC design pattern like it came out just yesterday. I know it's been around over 10 years years! Also it's a design pattern. ASP.NET is a technology. How do they relate? The only reason people are talking about it now because of Microsoft Marketing. You can argue separation of concerns and all that crap. It would be hard pressed for anyone to justify the value in using MVC over other patterns. What question was actually confusing but I get what the person is asking. My answer learn both. Like someone mentioned before, when learning ASP.NET make sure you fully grasp the page lifecycle stuff. Very important.

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                    Philip Laureano
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #20

                    kjmcsd wrote:

                    It's funny to see people talking about the MVC design pattern like it came out just yesterday. I know it's been around over 10 years years! Also it's a design pattern. ASP.NET is a technology. How do they relate?

                    Sorry, I actually meant ASP.NET vs ASP.NET MVC--not the MVC pattern itself. AFAIK, the MVC pattern has been around since Smalltalk, so it's way older than just a single decade. In any case, you're right--I'll just have to start with the basics of ASP.NET, and work my way up.

                    Do you know...LinFu?

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                    • P Philip Laureano

                      As a backend coder, I never really took the time to learn the frontend since I'm not really the artistic type, but now that I want to start writing web apps, I'm not sure which learning track I should follow when getting up to speed with web development. Should I start learning ASP.NET from scratch, or should I use the MVC to keep my code more simple? Which one is easier to learn in the shortest amount of time?

                      Do you know...LinFu?

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                      jluber
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #21

                      One thing which is overlooked is that the license for MVC, unlike ASP.NET, states that you can't run the code on Linux machine. So if you want to use Mono you have a problem with MVC.

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