>Visual Studio has been the #1 development environment for over 10 years. In the early 90's Microsoft created the most successful programming language ever. Visual Basic, from which all IDEs are now measured against.
It's about time you visual studio people take a look at what is happening outside vs.net, by Java developer standards its primitive and haven't moved much forward.
"Visual Studio today is still easy to use, powerful built-in debugger, powerful built in help (MSDN) and fully expandable via add-ins"
Tools from the post intellij era have that and much more, done much better. Even simple things like curly bracket matching is done better in most tools i know.
It's a shame that so many developers are satisfied with vs.net, it's ofcourse because they don't know any better, there is ofcourse the ones that came from the Java world, and thats why there is room for things like Resharper.. but thats just a patch and it should be integreated... it's a shame because if people is satisfied then things will not move very fast.. and i personaly wish i had a decent IDE for C# as i do for Java.
>I firmly believe if VS was available for Linux tomorrow, you'd see a lot more software (and better software) written for Linux.
Yes and with a post intellij era vs.net we would see even more!
Haha you make me laugh.. vs.net is like being in the stone age.
Take a look at intellij idea.. or even eclipse even though i prefer the first.
http://www.martinfowler.com/bliki/PostIntelliJ.htm l
Even Jbuilder6, years ago was a better IDE than vs.net 2005 is today... i hate every time i have to work with it.. it doesnt have half the features that most Java IDEs do.. and the ones it does have is poorly implemented compared to most Java IDEs.
John Wiley and Sons Mastering AspectJ Aspect-Oriented Programming in Java is a pretty good book on it.
It's ofcourse based on aspectj but when you know the principles behind the one it's easy to understand the rest.
Hey,
I wanted to let you know that another group (unrelated to us) has released a hysterical spoof of "The Scene". We saw it earlier today and were howling laughing. You can download it at www.welcometotehscene.com.
(Note "teh" instead of "the").
Our own release of Episode 6 is on schedule for March 25th. We'll update you before it comes out. In the meantime, we'd like to ask your help with something: It's about time our show got some attention on Slashdot!
If all of us post to www.slashdot.org over the next few days they'll be hard pressed to ignore us - and this new spoof could be excellent fodder to write about!
We'll offer the first person who succeeds in getting a story posted about "The Scene" a spot in an upcoming episode (either as one of our characters or yourself!) Please include the following two links in your
post:
The Scene
parody
To post, go to: http://slashdot.org/submit.pl
Thanks, all! Talk to you soon.
Mitchell
>Visual Studio has been the #1 development environment for over 10 years. In the early 90's Microsoft created the most successful programming language ever. Visual Basic, from which all IDEs are now measured against. It's about time you visual studio people take a look at what is happening outside vs.net, by Java developer standards its primitive and haven't moved much forward. "Visual Studio today is still easy to use, powerful built-in debugger, powerful built in help (MSDN) and fully expandable via add-ins" Tools from the post intellij era have that and much more, done much better. Even simple things like curly bracket matching is done better in most tools i know. It's a shame that so many developers are satisfied with vs.net, it's ofcourse because they don't know any better, there is ofcourse the ones that came from the Java world, and thats why there is room for things like Resharper.. but thats just a patch and it should be integreated... it's a shame because if people is satisfied then things will not move very fast.. and i personaly wish i had a decent IDE for C# as i do for Java. >I firmly believe if VS was available for Linux tomorrow, you'd see a lot more software (and better software) written for Linux. Yes and with a post intellij era vs.net we would see even more!
Haha you make me laugh.. vs.net is like being in the stone age. Take a look at intellij idea .. or even eclipse even though i prefer the first.
http://www.martinfowler.com/bliki/PostIntelliJ.htm l
Even Jbuilder6, years ago was a better IDE than vs.net 2005 is today... i hate every time i have to work with it.. it doesnt have half the features that most Java IDEs do.. and the ones it does have is poorly implemented compared to most Java IDEs.
John Wiley and Sons Mastering AspectJ Aspect-Oriented Programming in Java is a pretty good book on it. It's ofcourse based on aspectj but when you know the principles behind the one it's easy to understand the rest.