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  3. C# - just making an observation

C# - just making an observation

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  • M mikepwilson

    Ugh. Is it really that good? I've fiddlyfarted with it here and there, but I've never done any serious work in it. I've been a C++ guy since the 80s (with lots of everything in the interim.) Maybe it's time to suck it up and take a serious bite out of it.

    L Offline
    L Offline
    Lost User
    wrote on last edited by
    #7

    The heavily nerfed templates in C# will probably annoy you. They annoy me, and I don't even work with C++ that much.

    1 Reply Last reply
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    • M Marc Clifton

      Not to start a flame war, I am simply relating my recent personal experience... So, over the last couple of years, I've forayed into Ruby, PHP, very recently Java, and this coming from a background of C, C++, Pascal, Fortran, even some COBOL, and of course assembly language and some things I don't or don't want to remember (BASIC, LISP and Forth come to mind.) In terms of "modern" programming languages, and especially after my recent foray in Java (granted, version 7, so I'm not able to take advantage of lambdas) I have come to the conclusion that, frankly, C# is the most elegant and well crafted language I've ever worked with. Yeah, I remember the C# 1.0 days when I was cursing the lack of templates/generics and the idiocy of single inheritance, but no more. I find that code that I write in C# can be elegant, well crafted, expressive, and just a pleasure to write. I don't have that experience with other languages, except perhaps for F#, once I get into the rhythm of FP. Marc

      Imperative to Functional Programming Succinctly Higher Order Programming

      OriginalGriffO Offline
      OriginalGriffO Offline
      OriginalGriff
      wrote on last edited by
      #8

      I would agree. Started with COBOL/FORTRAN, moved to Pascal and assembler, then to C and Assembler, and C++ and assembler. Then moved to C# five or six years ago. It's a coherent, well-thought-out language, that works very, very well indeed. My only criticism is that it's become easier to abuse it: var in particular, along with ArrayList and it's unpleasant ilk still remaining in the framework years after they should have been put to sleep as a mercy killing...along with teachers who think goto is something they should start off by teaching.:mad:

      Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...

      "I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
      "Common sense is so rare these days, it should be classified as a super power" - Random T-shirt

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      • M Marc Clifton

        Not to start a flame war, I am simply relating my recent personal experience... So, over the last couple of years, I've forayed into Ruby, PHP, very recently Java, and this coming from a background of C, C++, Pascal, Fortran, even some COBOL, and of course assembly language and some things I don't or don't want to remember (BASIC, LISP and Forth come to mind.) In terms of "modern" programming languages, and especially after my recent foray in Java (granted, version 7, so I'm not able to take advantage of lambdas) I have come to the conclusion that, frankly, C# is the most elegant and well crafted language I've ever worked with. Yeah, I remember the C# 1.0 days when I was cursing the lack of templates/generics and the idiocy of single inheritance, but no more. I find that code that I write in C# can be elegant, well crafted, expressive, and just a pleasure to write. I don't have that experience with other languages, except perhaps for F#, once I get into the rhythm of FP. Marc

        Imperative to Functional Programming Succinctly Higher Order Programming

        J Offline
        J Offline
        JMK NI
        wrote on last edited by
        #9

        Say what you like about Microsoft, but they were able to get the smartest guys in the industry in the same room at the same time, over an extended period of time, and leave them to it. The result was C# and I agree, it's bloody brilliant!

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        • M mikepwilson

          Ugh. Is it really that good? I've fiddlyfarted with it here and there, but I've never done any serious work in it. I've been a C++ guy since the 80s (with lots of everything in the interim.) Maybe it's time to suck it up and take a serious bite out of it.

          A Offline
          A Offline
          Albert Holguin
          wrote on last edited by
          #10

          I'm on this same boat... I've been C/C++ for so long it's hard to see too much justification of why to change something that's worked so well for so long. I have however, heard good things about C#... and it'll be even more interesting once MS makes their .NET framework open source and it spreads to other platforms more easily. As a side note, I've also recently started working in Python and can definitely see why people like it. Can easily be made as fast as C++ and easy to work with like Matlab scripts.

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          • M Marc Clifton

            Not to start a flame war, I am simply relating my recent personal experience... So, over the last couple of years, I've forayed into Ruby, PHP, very recently Java, and this coming from a background of C, C++, Pascal, Fortran, even some COBOL, and of course assembly language and some things I don't or don't want to remember (BASIC, LISP and Forth come to mind.) In terms of "modern" programming languages, and especially after my recent foray in Java (granted, version 7, so I'm not able to take advantage of lambdas) I have come to the conclusion that, frankly, C# is the most elegant and well crafted language I've ever worked with. Yeah, I remember the C# 1.0 days when I was cursing the lack of templates/generics and the idiocy of single inheritance, but no more. I find that code that I write in C# can be elegant, well crafted, expressive, and just a pleasure to write. I don't have that experience with other languages, except perhaps for F#, once I get into the rhythm of FP. Marc

            Imperative to Functional Programming Succinctly Higher Order Programming

            R Offline
            R Offline
            Ravi Bhavnani
            wrote on last edited by
            #11

            In violent agreement! :thumbsup:  (Although I must confess I'm ignorant about F#.) /ravi

            My new year resolution: 2048 x 1536 Home | Articles | My .NET bits | Freeware ravib(at)ravib(dot)com

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            • A Albert Holguin

              I'm on this same boat... I've been C/C++ for so long it's hard to see too much justification of why to change something that's worked so well for so long. I have however, heard good things about C#... and it'll be even more interesting once MS makes their .NET framework open source and it spreads to other platforms more easily. As a side note, I've also recently started working in Python and can definitely see why people like it. Can easily be made as fast as C++ and easy to work with like Matlab scripts.

              M Offline
              M Offline
              mikepwilson
              wrote on last edited by
              #12

              Python's a slick little language. I use perl day to day. It's tough to justify C++ for these quick hit scripts I've fallen in to writing. God how I miss real programming.

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              • M Marc Clifton

                Not to start a flame war, I am simply relating my recent personal experience... So, over the last couple of years, I've forayed into Ruby, PHP, very recently Java, and this coming from a background of C, C++, Pascal, Fortran, even some COBOL, and of course assembly language and some things I don't or don't want to remember (BASIC, LISP and Forth come to mind.) In terms of "modern" programming languages, and especially after my recent foray in Java (granted, version 7, so I'm not able to take advantage of lambdas) I have come to the conclusion that, frankly, C# is the most elegant and well crafted language I've ever worked with. Yeah, I remember the C# 1.0 days when I was cursing the lack of templates/generics and the idiocy of single inheritance, but no more. I find that code that I write in C# can be elegant, well crafted, expressive, and just a pleasure to write. I don't have that experience with other languages, except perhaps for F#, once I get into the rhythm of FP. Marc

                Imperative to Functional Programming Succinctly Higher Order Programming

                N Offline
                N Offline
                Nemanja Trifunovic
                wrote on last edited by
                #13

                To each their own. I frankly never liked C# - feels like VB sprinkled with semicolons and curly braces X|

                utf8-cpp

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                • M mikepwilson

                  Python's a slick little language. I use perl day to day. It's tough to justify C++ for these quick hit scripts I've fallen in to writing. God how I miss real programming.

                  A Offline
                  A Offline
                  Albert Holguin
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #14

                  mikepwilson wrote:

                  I use perl day to day. It's tough to justify C++ for these quick hit scripts I've fallen in to writing.

                  In my last job I used perl for quick scripts too. It worked out well...

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                  • A Albert Holguin

                    I'm on this same boat... I've been C/C++ for so long it's hard to see too much justification of why to change something that's worked so well for so long. I have however, heard good things about C#... and it'll be even more interesting once MS makes their .NET framework open source and it spreads to other platforms more easily. As a side note, I've also recently started working in Python and can definitely see why people like it. Can easily be made as fast as C++ and easy to work with like Matlab scripts.

                    N Offline
                    N Offline
                    Nemanja Trifunovic
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #15

                    Albert Holguin wrote:

                    Python and can definitely see why people like it. Can easily be made as fast as C++ and easy to work with like Matlab scripts.

                    I use Python a lot these days and generally like it, but it is really impossible to make it even remotely as fast as C++. Even Java code is blazingly fast compared to Python.

                    utf8-cpp

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                    • N Nemanja Trifunovic

                      Albert Holguin wrote:

                      Python and can definitely see why people like it. Can easily be made as fast as C++ and easy to work with like Matlab scripts.

                      I use Python a lot these days and generally like it, but it is really impossible to make it even remotely as fast as C++. Even Java code is blazingly fast compared to Python.

                      utf8-cpp

                      A Offline
                      A Offline
                      Albert Holguin
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #16

                      Nemanja Trifunovic wrote:

                      but it is really impossible to make it even remotely as fast as C++

                      What!? ...are you kidding? ...it's easy to make it that fast ...we use it on real-time systems.

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                      • N Nemanja Trifunovic

                        To each their own. I frankly never liked C# - feels like VB sprinkled with semicolons and curly braces X|

                        utf8-cpp

                        J Offline
                        J Offline
                        Jeremy Falcon
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #17

                        I thought that way for a while too, until I had to use it. I wouldn't use it for apps that require heavy computation, but for business apps its nice and much much better than VB.

                        Jeremy Falcon

                        M M 2 Replies Last reply
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                        • M Marc Clifton

                          Not to start a flame war, I am simply relating my recent personal experience... So, over the last couple of years, I've forayed into Ruby, PHP, very recently Java, and this coming from a background of C, C++, Pascal, Fortran, even some COBOL, and of course assembly language and some things I don't or don't want to remember (BASIC, LISP and Forth come to mind.) In terms of "modern" programming languages, and especially after my recent foray in Java (granted, version 7, so I'm not able to take advantage of lambdas) I have come to the conclusion that, frankly, C# is the most elegant and well crafted language I've ever worked with. Yeah, I remember the C# 1.0 days when I was cursing the lack of templates/generics and the idiocy of single inheritance, but no more. I find that code that I write in C# can be elegant, well crafted, expressive, and just a pleasure to write. I don't have that experience with other languages, except perhaps for F#, once I get into the rhythm of FP. Marc

                          Imperative to Functional Programming Succinctly Higher Order Programming

                          L Offline
                          L Offline
                          Lost User
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #18

                          Marc Clifton wrote:

                          frankly, C# is the most elegant and well crafted language I've ever worked with

                          Yes, it is. Even though I still miss a QUICK compiler like Delphi had (and sometimes a linker), and aw, the joy of compiling your own VCL. Being able to allocate and deallocate by hand also seemed to be better than having the memory fill up until some lowpriority thread halts your app and starts cleaning up - even though NET4 does a good job at it, I'd rather still be doing it myself.

                          Bastard Programmer from Hell :suss: If you can't read my code, try converting it here[^]

                          OriginalGriffO 1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • M Marc Clifton

                            Not to start a flame war, I am simply relating my recent personal experience... So, over the last couple of years, I've forayed into Ruby, PHP, very recently Java, and this coming from a background of C, C++, Pascal, Fortran, even some COBOL, and of course assembly language and some things I don't or don't want to remember (BASIC, LISP and Forth come to mind.) In terms of "modern" programming languages, and especially after my recent foray in Java (granted, version 7, so I'm not able to take advantage of lambdas) I have come to the conclusion that, frankly, C# is the most elegant and well crafted language I've ever worked with. Yeah, I remember the C# 1.0 days when I was cursing the lack of templates/generics and the idiocy of single inheritance, but no more. I find that code that I write in C# can be elegant, well crafted, expressive, and just a pleasure to write. I don't have that experience with other languages, except perhaps for F#, once I get into the rhythm of FP. Marc

                            Imperative to Functional Programming Succinctly Higher Order Programming

                            I Offline
                            I Offline
                            Ian Shlasko
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #19

                            :thumbsup: I started in BASIC back in the 80's, and made my way through C, Perl, Java, and some dabbling in TCL and Python... But I haven't found anything better than C#. Granted, Visual Studio has something to do with that... Haven't found a better IDE anywhere. The others I've tried all feel clumsy and weak. Well, I mean, Unity is several kinds of awesome, but that's a little different. Now if only they would switch Excel's scripting interface from VBA to .NET, I could stop hating MS Office too.

                            Proud to have finally moved to the A-Ark. Which one are you in?
                            Author of the Guardians Saga (Sci-Fi/Fantasy novels)

                            J A M 3 Replies Last reply
                            0
                            • M Marc Clifton

                              Not to start a flame war, I am simply relating my recent personal experience... So, over the last couple of years, I've forayed into Ruby, PHP, very recently Java, and this coming from a background of C, C++, Pascal, Fortran, even some COBOL, and of course assembly language and some things I don't or don't want to remember (BASIC, LISP and Forth come to mind.) In terms of "modern" programming languages, and especially after my recent foray in Java (granted, version 7, so I'm not able to take advantage of lambdas) I have come to the conclusion that, frankly, C# is the most elegant and well crafted language I've ever worked with. Yeah, I remember the C# 1.0 days when I was cursing the lack of templates/generics and the idiocy of single inheritance, but no more. I find that code that I write in C# can be elegant, well crafted, expressive, and just a pleasure to write. I don't have that experience with other languages, except perhaps for F#, once I get into the rhythm of FP. Marc

                              Imperative to Functional Programming Succinctly Higher Order Programming

                              M Offline
                              M Offline
                              Member 10088171
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #20

                              Most agree C# is good but times are changing again. First it comes with the overhead of the framework, undeterministic memory management with garbage collectors. Devices are getting smaller and competition on the server side is cutting into profits. Simply put in terms of performance per $ it cannot win on the server side and as mobile app with C++. We are slowly moving to true massive parallelism using GPU computing and it is doable with managed code going through some extra steps to bridge native and managed but why doing it? Modern languages tend to be more verbose. C++ code is terse, impressively logic and amazingly modern and relevant despite old age. C# facilities are nothing more than iteration of STL or Boost. The only advantage is UI but with Web front this is no longer main consideration in choosing the language. C# is evolving and there is nothing wrong with it (I am using .Net extensively) but looking forward, surprisingly, for many applications C# may not be the best choice.

                              1 Reply Last reply
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                              • I Ian Shlasko

                                :thumbsup: I started in BASIC back in the 80's, and made my way through C, Perl, Java, and some dabbling in TCL and Python... But I haven't found anything better than C#. Granted, Visual Studio has something to do with that... Haven't found a better IDE anywhere. The others I've tried all feel clumsy and weak. Well, I mean, Unity is several kinds of awesome, but that's a little different. Now if only they would switch Excel's scripting interface from VBA to .NET, I could stop hating MS Office too.

                                Proud to have finally moved to the A-Ark. Which one are you in?
                                Author of the Guardians Saga (Sci-Fi/Fantasy novels)

                                J Offline
                                J Offline
                                Jeremy Falcon
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #21

                                Ian Shlasko wrote:

                                Granted, Visual Studio has something to do with that... Haven't found a better IDE anywhere.

                                :thumbsup: And I'm not an MS fanboy at all, but I recognize a good piece of software when I see it.

                                Jeremy Falcon

                                I 1 Reply Last reply
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                                • J Jeremy Falcon

                                  Ian Shlasko wrote:

                                  Granted, Visual Studio has something to do with that... Haven't found a better IDE anywhere.

                                  :thumbsup: And I'm not an MS fanboy at all, but I recognize a good piece of software when I see it.

                                  Jeremy Falcon

                                  I Offline
                                  I Offline
                                  Ian Shlasko
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #22

                                  Jeremy Falcon wrote:

                                  And I'm not an MS fanboy at all, but I recognize a good piece of software when I see it.

                                  Exactly... I generally dislike uSoft, but Visual Studio is just a work of art... And honestly, so is Excel, as long as people use it as a spreadsheet/calculator and not an application platform...

                                  Proud to have finally moved to the A-Ark. Which one are you in?
                                  Author of the Guardians Saga (Sci-Fi/Fantasy novels)

                                  OriginalGriffO 1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • I Ian Shlasko

                                    :thumbsup: I started in BASIC back in the 80's, and made my way through C, Perl, Java, and some dabbling in TCL and Python... But I haven't found anything better than C#. Granted, Visual Studio has something to do with that... Haven't found a better IDE anywhere. The others I've tried all feel clumsy and weak. Well, I mean, Unity is several kinds of awesome, but that's a little different. Now if only they would switch Excel's scripting interface from VBA to .NET, I could stop hating MS Office too.

                                    Proud to have finally moved to the A-Ark. Which one are you in?
                                    Author of the Guardians Saga (Sci-Fi/Fantasy novels)

                                    A Offline
                                    A Offline
                                    Albert Holguin
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #23

                                    Ian Shlasko wrote:

                                    Granted, Visual Studio has something to do with that... Haven't found a better IDE anywhere.

                                    I will have to agree with that... I'm currently using Eclipse and it pisses me off on a regular basis.

                                    Ian Shlasko wrote:

                                    Unity is several kinds of awesome

                                    As in Ubuntu's Unity? ...there has never been a slower interface ever developed for Linux! I actually stopped using Ubuntu because of Unity, now I use Mint (grant it, it's still based on Ubuntu but with a better interface).

                                    I 1 Reply Last reply
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                                    • A Albert Holguin

                                      Nemanja Trifunovic wrote:

                                      but it is really impossible to make it even remotely as fast as C++

                                      What!? ...are you kidding? ...it's easy to make it that fast ...we use it on real-time systems.

                                      N Offline
                                      N Offline
                                      Nemanja Trifunovic
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #24

                                      Python? It is the slowest language I've ever worked with. And the benchmarks agree[^]: Python is up to 100 times slower than C++ and consumes up to four times more memory.

                                      utf8-cpp

                                      A D 3 Replies Last reply
                                      0
                                      • M Marc Clifton

                                        Not to start a flame war, I am simply relating my recent personal experience... So, over the last couple of years, I've forayed into Ruby, PHP, very recently Java, and this coming from a background of C, C++, Pascal, Fortran, even some COBOL, and of course assembly language and some things I don't or don't want to remember (BASIC, LISP and Forth come to mind.) In terms of "modern" programming languages, and especially after my recent foray in Java (granted, version 7, so I'm not able to take advantage of lambdas) I have come to the conclusion that, frankly, C# is the most elegant and well crafted language I've ever worked with. Yeah, I remember the C# 1.0 days when I was cursing the lack of templates/generics and the idiocy of single inheritance, but no more. I find that code that I write in C# can be elegant, well crafted, expressive, and just a pleasure to write. I don't have that experience with other languages, except perhaps for F#, once I get into the rhythm of FP. Marc

                                        Imperative to Functional Programming Succinctly Higher Order Programming

                                        D Offline
                                        D Offline
                                        den2k88
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #25

                                        Until VS2008 (more I don't know) I found a flaw that I hate: it is impossible to separate definition and implementation in separate files. Also, it is slow to compile, it uses that crappy .NET framework with the crappier documentation and it is slow to compute unless you fill it up with unsafe. I AM biased because I really need low-level functionalities, the only time I ued C# was to create a VS add-in to view areas of memory as 8 or 16 bit images and apply some algorithms and infinite zoom (with no blurring, must be exactly a pixel per pixel representation). The areas of memory come directly from the VS debugger on a running process, and it has to understand variable names, pointers, raw addresses and some internal data structures. With C# it is painfully slow, where the older counterpart of this add-in, developed in VB6, is fast as a Thunder (btw Thunder WAS the codename of VB6 :D). It has some good points, i like the UI designer and its way of managing events, but stil... I will hate the day we switch off VB6 and turn to C#.

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                                        • A Albert Holguin

                                          mikepwilson wrote:

                                          I use perl day to day. It's tough to justify C++ for these quick hit scripts I've fallen in to writing.

                                          In my last job I used perl for quick scripts too. It worked out well...

                                          M Offline
                                          M Offline
                                          mikepwilson
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #26

                                          I love it. It's the right tool for a great many jobs. The fact that I can just develop and deploy as fast as I can is a godsend.

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