C
Carlos J. Quintero [VB MVP]
Hi Greg,
Most of the .NET learning curve is about its concepts and libraries, being
the language a thin layer on top of all. So, many of us can use both
languages quite fluently. In general, if you have a Java/C/C++ background,
you may feel more comfortable using C# and if you have a VB6 background, you
may like more VB.NET. The capabilities, speed, etc. of both languages are
the same for most projects and the bigger differences are in the IDE
experience with each one.
--
Best regards,
Carlos J. Quintero
MZ-Tools: Productivity add-ins for Visual Studio
You can code, design and document much faster:
http://www.mztools.com
Most of the .NET learning curve is about its concepts and libraries, being
the language a thin layer on top of all. So, many of us can use both
languages quite fluently. In general, if you have a Java/C/C++ background,
you may feel more comfortable using C# and if you have a VB6 background, you
may like more VB.NET. The capabilities, speed, etc. of both languages are
the same for most projects and the bigger differences are in the IDE
experience with each one.
--
Best regards,
Carlos J. Quintero
MZ-Tools: Productivity add-ins for Visual Studio
You can code, design and document much faster:
http://www.mztools.com
... I am a VB lover as