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Its a programming language. It comes in two flavours - legacy and normal. Legacy is obsolete, so I won't go into it here. Normal uses the .net framework, documentation for which is available on MSDN. It's easy to read, and is the beginners' language of choice (unless you like the elegant, flowing symbols of C#)
Between the idea
And the reality
Between the motion
And the act
Falls the Shadow
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Computafreak wrote: (unless you like the elegant, flowing symbols of C#)
I think you mean "unless you like trying to figure out where the heck you're missing that curly bracket".
Visual Basic an excellent programming language that is popular with beginners and experts alike because it's easy to understand, and has a very English-like syntax. All while still having the power of the .NET framework at its disposal. Visual Basic is also very good for rapid application development thanks to the very well thought out Visual Studio IDE.
-Ray Phillips
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It's probably a matter of taste (you have none ). I don't like having to write out sentences to tell a computer what to do when I can just use notes (comparatively). Besides, the IDE highlights and indents brackets automatically, so it's not that big a deal
Between the idea
And the reality
Between the motion
And the act
Falls the Shadow
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Most .net is the same between the two really, the following is shorter in vb
Select Case number
Case 0
'do something
Case 1
'do something
Case 2
'do something
Case 3
'do something
End Select
I prefer the case insensitivity in vb, strSomething and strsomething should NOT be different, it is not obvious enough when your flying through the code that someone else wrote. And obvious errors are the easiest to discover.
See: http://www.joelonsoftware.com/articles/Wrong.html[^]
Proudly drinking the finest Maryland craft beer. Visiting Maryland for business? First round is on me!
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Computafreak wrote: It comes in two flavours - legacy and normal.
So can I infer:
It comes in two flavours - legacy(abnormal) and normal.
जय हिंद
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Yes. I've tried to use VB6 for a few years; it took months to get that influence out of my system. Classes in VB6 - ugh!
Between the idea
And the reality
Between the motion
And the act
Falls the Shadow
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It's a beer, but not many people drink it.
Seriously, how can this be a serious question ? If you don't know what it is, you obviously are not a programmer, so why ask here ?
Christian Graus
Driven to the arms of OSX by Vista.
"! i don't exactly like or do programming and it only gives me a headache." - spotted in VB forums.
I can do things with my brain that I can't even google. I can flex the front part of my brain instantly anytime I want. It can be exhausting and it even causes me vision problems for some reason. - CaptainSeeSharp
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Christian Graus wrote: It's a beer,
Where can I get it?
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Here[^] you can get some.
Luc Pattyn [Forum Guidelines] [My Articles]
DISCLAIMER: this message may have been modified by others; it may no longer reflect what I intended, and may contain bad advice; use at your own risk and with extreme care.
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http://www.duclaw.com
Proudly drinking the finest Maryland craft beer. Visiting Maryland for business? First round is on me!
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Some things cannot be described and must be experienced. Set your mind free!
Now, go pound salt!
"There's no such thing as a stupid question, only stupid people." - Mr. Garrison
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It's a version of Beginnering All Symbolic Instruction Code
Steve Jowett
-------------------------
Real programmers don't comment their code. If it was hard to write, it should be hard to read.
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Hi,
I am trying to find the ProcessID in task manager for a Cluster Resource Item. For Example if we have a Cluster Service installed which has a resource item which is Online - Running, then what willbe the processid associated to it.
How ca we figure out using vbscripting?
Thanks
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The processID will change every time the app is run. You can use WMI and it's Win32_Process class to get the ID from its ProcessId property. Documentation and a VBScript example can be found here[^].
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Hello
If there is extra vb.net programmer who want to work for me
on some part of my project please contact me on:
modified on Wednesday, June 17, 2009 5:18 PM
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Wrong place to post this numb skull.
You may want to post more details in the appropriate place like the actual work and what you're willing to pay.
Cheers!
"There's no such thing as a stupid question, only stupid people." - Mr. Garrison
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Post it on jobs.codeproject.com, not in the programming forums.
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I removed your email address for three reasons
1 - to save people from themselves, someone who posts a job ad here, obviously is not someone you want to work for
2 - to save you from yourself, bots trawl the web for people stupid enough to post their address, to spam them
3 - because if you want to advertise for a job here, there is a job board where you can do that
Christian Graus
Driven to the arms of OSX by Vista.
"! i don't exactly like or do programming and it only gives me a headache." - spotted in VB forums.
I can do things with my brain that I can't even google. I can flex the front part of my brain instantly anytime I want. It can be exhausting and it even causes me vision problems for some reason. - CaptainSeeSharp
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I am using Visual Basic 6.
I am trying to write a program that would gather statistics on the loudness of the input on the microphone for an expiriment.
(I have a USB microphone.)
WHAT command in Visual Basic would allow me to get a numeric value for the loudness of the sound coming from the microphone?
I would like to see a text of the program that does that.
Thanks.
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You have a problem. The loudness of a sound is not accurate because of settings in the sound card, quality of microphone, calibration, type of microphone, ...
I hope you're not using the data for anything in particular.
But, you've got a bunch of options to look at - here[^].
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i know how to use google, thanks
i am using visual basic 6
so vb.net is no good for me
they are different languages
i found some code in c#, but even if i imply it into vb6, i will have to change it, so i don't think that it will work for me
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cavemen wrote: i know how to use google, thanks
Great. Then you know how to replace "VB.NET" in the query with "VB6".
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