Favorite programming language?
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pdriley wrote: All that vile string handling You're thinking of C. std::string is perfectly OK. pdriley wrote: taking two days to write a simple dialog (remember... MFC is cheating, even if it isn't all that much easier). 1. MFC is VERY easy. 2. If MFC is cheating, so is VB or C#. Remember, they are all calling the Win32 API at the end of the day. pdriley wrote: C# is looking like a good contender but I haven't REALLY pushed it yet, so I'm reserving judgement. It's got a lot of nice things, but it's missing a lot of essential stuff as well. It's a good toy language for web development, it may grow into a contender for writing apps where you'd currently use C++, but it's not there yet. Christian We're just observing the seasonal migration from VB to VC. Most of these birds will be killed by predators or will die of hunger. Only the best will survive - Tomasz Sowinski 29-07-2002 ( on the number of newbie posters in the VC forum ) Cats, and most other animals apart from mad cows can write fully functional vb code. - Simon Walton - 6-Aug-2002
:) I kind of expected most of these responses. Some people have missed the point that I do see the necessity of C++, in fact I'd say 90% of my work-related programming is C++. I do believe in using the right tool for the right job. If I was writing a batch mainframe program that simply picks data from a hierachical database and writes a report, you can be damned sure I'd want to use COBOL. But the question wasn't "which is the most powerful", it was "which is your favourite. Before .NET came along, VB was my favourite. As I said, I'm reserving judgement on C# but it does seem at first glance to be better than VB. Final note: when I said MFC was cheating I meant in terms of "doing it the hard way just because you can." It was a bit of a joke, I didn't think anyone would take me that seriously ;) Paul
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I can't decide between Scheme and C++. Scheme is very clean and simple - elegant IMHO. C++ on the other hand is very complete and powerful. What's your favorite programming language? Preferred storyline: - I am your father. Search your feelings and you'll know it's the truth. Together we can rule this galaxy like father and son. - Ok dad. Let's kick some butt!
I think the best thing since slice bread is Delphi. This is the most RAD tool I know. Love also C++ wich is my main foucs at work. I'm now digging in C# wich is very good since it's by the same guy who created Delphi...:-D
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No way! I find it really rewarding when someone can look at my program and intuitively figure out how it works because I've designed a good UI. And besides, being a consultant, there isn't anyone I can share my code with and have them ooh and ahh (or maybe barf and puke). The UI is where the fun stuff is, because that's where the "social" aspect of programming comes in--it's how people "talk" with the program. Marc
I agree about UI programming. I hate programs with clumsy interfaces, so I like to make mine as friendly and intuitive as possible. Things like giving error messages in normal english that explain how to fix the problem, or making dialogs with big lists resizeable. _____________________ "They'd dearly make us pay For laughing in their faces And making it our way" -Love My Way, Psychedelic Furs
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1. C++ 2. C 3. Z80 Assembler 4. Fortran 77 ;P :beer:
Nemanja Trifunovic wrote: Fortran 77 its FORTRAN :-) Regardz Colin J Davies
Sonork ID 100.9197:Colin
You are the intrepid one, always willing to leap into the fray! A serious character flaw, I might add, but entertaining. Said by Roger Wright about me.
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I can't decide between Scheme and C++. Scheme is very clean and simple - elegant IMHO. C++ on the other hand is very complete and powerful. What's your favorite programming language? Preferred storyline: - I am your father. Search your feelings and you'll know it's the truth. Together we can rule this galaxy like father and son. - Ok dad. Let's kick some butt!
1 APL 2 APL 3 APL I wish for a Visual APL IDE. Regardz Colin J Davies
Sonork ID 100.9197:Colin
You are the intrepid one, always willing to leap into the fray! A serious character flaw, I might add, but entertaining. Said by Roger Wright about me.
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I can't decide between Scheme and C++. Scheme is very clean and simple - elegant IMHO. C++ on the other hand is very complete and powerful. What's your favorite programming language? Preferred storyline: - I am your father. Search your feelings and you'll know it's the truth. Together we can rule this galaxy like father and son. - Ok dad. Let's kick some butt!
Jörgen Sigvardsson wrote: What's your favorite programming language? Binary... ;) Actually I am language neutral. I really do not go "oooh, I love the way C++ handles blah blah." I just want to use whatever language is best suited to the solution. People peg VB on to me, that is only because it did the job I needed and it did it well. Hell, I have done Java even, when required of course. :-D And COBOL most definitley is not the best language. regards, Paul Watson Bluegrass Cape Town, South Africa "Winning an argument on the internet is like winning a gold medal at the Special Olympics -- even though you're the champ, you're still a retard." - Kuro5hin.org Wrong but still funny Simon Walton wrote: You come across a lot of people who call themselves realists, when they
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I can't decide between Scheme and C++. Scheme is very clean and simple - elegant IMHO. C++ on the other hand is very complete and powerful. What's your favorite programming language? Preferred storyline: - I am your father. Search your feelings and you'll know it's the truth. Together we can rule this galaxy like father and son. - Ok dad. Let's kick some butt!
I'd say C and C++ because they are so versitile, used for everything from microcontollers to GUI. Mentor Graphics software is also cool, but that isn't really programming.
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1 APL 2 APL 3 APL I wish for a Visual APL IDE. Regardz Colin J Davies
Sonork ID 100.9197:Colin
You are the intrepid one, always willing to leap into the fray! A serious character flaw, I might add, but entertaining. Said by Roger Wright about me.
APL? :wtf: You sick and twisted masochist! ;P Preferred storyline: - I am your father. Search your feelings and you'll know it's the truth. Together we can rule this galaxy like father and son. - Ok dad. Let's kick some butt!
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I can't decide between Scheme and C++. Scheme is very clean and simple - elegant IMHO. C++ on the other hand is very complete and powerful. What's your favorite programming language? Preferred storyline: - I am your father. Search your feelings and you'll know it's the truth. Together we can rule this galaxy like father and son. - Ok dad. Let's kick some butt!
C, it is so simple and powerfull. You are in control of everything and the C compilers are now so developed and debugged that you can almost be sure that if an error occurs in your app then you will be able to find the bug in your own code and solve it. If the code is written by someone that have practiced C programming for years then it also tends to be very readable and easy to debug. And did i mention that it is incedibly fast?, assembler is faster if you know the CPU 100% and knows how to optimize for oddities like simultanous operations and memory alignment, but the few times I tried optimizing things like strchr() the VC5 compiler kicked my arse (there is however a BIG performance change in the compilations from VC4 to VC5, in VC4 such optimizations were actually faster than waht the compiler could come up with). "After all it's just text at the end of the day. - Colin Davies
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APL? :wtf: You sick and twisted masochist! ;P Preferred storyline: - I am your father. Search your feelings and you'll know it's the truth. Together we can rule this galaxy like father and son. - Ok dad. Let's kick some butt!
Before using APL I had bben using FORTRAN and COBOL, and when we switched to APL our developing times were reduced incredibly. But of course our code was write once and never touch again. :-) Regardz Colin J Davies
Sonork ID 100.9197:Colin
You are the intrepid one, always willing to leap into the fray! A serious character flaw, I might add, but entertaining. Said by Roger Wright about me.
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C, it is so simple and powerfull. You are in control of everything and the C compilers are now so developed and debugged that you can almost be sure that if an error occurs in your app then you will be able to find the bug in your own code and solve it. If the code is written by someone that have practiced C programming for years then it also tends to be very readable and easy to debug. And did i mention that it is incedibly fast?, assembler is faster if you know the CPU 100% and knows how to optimize for oddities like simultanous operations and memory alignment, but the few times I tried optimizing things like strchr() the VC5 compiler kicked my arse (there is however a BIG performance change in the compilations from VC4 to VC5, in VC4 such optimizations were actually faster than waht the compiler could come up with). "After all it's just text at the end of the day. - Colin Davies
Yeah I don't see antbenefit now in handcompiling C, but C++ compilers have still a way to come to reach C. I wonder if part of the problem is the C++ to C conversions are in need of a review. Regardz Colin J Davies
Sonork ID 100.9197:Colin
You are the intrepid one, always willing to leap into the fray! A serious character flaw, I might add, but entertaining. Said by Roger Wright about me.
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Yeah I don't see antbenefit now in handcompiling C, but C++ compilers have still a way to come to reach C. I wonder if part of the problem is the C++ to C conversions are in need of a review. Regardz Colin J Davies
Sonork ID 100.9197:Colin
You are the intrepid one, always willing to leap into the fray! A serious character flaw, I might add, but entertaining. Said by Roger Wright about me.
I wonder if part of the problem is the C++ to C conversions are in need of a review. I don't know of any C++ compilers that compile to C as an intermediate step anymore. Every one I can think of goes straight from C++ to IL to code generation... Tim Lesher http://www.lesher.ws