T
the_grove_man
I purchased a book titled "Pro ASP.NET 2.0" to get up to speed on web
stuff because I ususally do Windows Form Applications.. But in the
first chapters I was reading this week it brought to mind some things I
heard in the past that I thought someone could clarify.
On Page 6 it states
"ASP.NET web pages (and web services) are executed within the CLR
(common language runtime), so they can be authored in any language that
has a CLR-compliant compiler. No longer are you limited to using
VBScript or JavaScript, instead you can use modern object-oriented
languages such as Visual Basic and C#. It's also important to note that
ASP.NET pages are not interpreted but are instead compiled into
assemblies."
A friend of mine said "You still use JavaScript for client side data
validation and whatever other features you want on the client side. You
can still embed code on the HTML asp side, it's just not efficient or
very objected oriented to do so.
I just wanted to know if this is true.
Thanks
stuff because I ususally do Windows Form Applications.. But in the
first chapters I was reading this week it brought to mind some things I
heard in the past that I thought someone could clarify.
On Page 6 it states
"ASP.NET web pages (and web services) are executed within the CLR
(common language runtime), so they can be authored in any language that
has a CLR-compliant compiler. No longer are you limited to using
VBScript or JavaScript, instead you can use modern object-oriented
languages such as Visual Basic and C#. It's also important to note that
ASP.NET pages are not interpreted but are instead compiled into
assemblies."
A friend of mine said "You still use JavaScript for client side data
validation and whatever other features you want on the client side. You
can still embed code on the HTML asp side, it's just not efficient or
very objected oriented to do so.
I just wanted to know if this is true.
Thanks