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To get a developer to change is very difficult.
Mainly they can do it faster the old way and most of the time they don't have the time to learn the new way.
I worked for a mayor company, a long time ago that used C as their main language. When I came along and developed libraries, gave classes and tried to spend time teaching them C++ I had no takers.
Just an old hippie and don't know what to do;
Should I hang on to the old or grab on to the new? Bellamy Brothers
"Ten men in the country could buy the world and ten million can’t buy enough to eat." Will Rogers
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At "my" company we create a lot of small applications. Many of them have data grids to display e.g. a bill of material, tree-views, little bit of drag and drop, etc.
We wire this up way faster with Winforms than with WPF. The WinForms data binding isn't that bad. And there are almost never surprises that make you google for hours how to solve this weirdness. Maybe if we would use 3rd party controls like we do in WinForms (DevExpress), it would be easier. But plain WPF takes a ridiculous amount of time to make things work.
We also have two teams which work on big WPF projects for years now. They created awesome UIs. But the effort they put in for this is tremendous. So, if your customer is willing to pay for WPF, go for it. If you need it yesterday, go with Winforms
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...and our core development team is using C++ and MFC. It's an ECAD system which is in devolopment for over 20 years. Was once ported from HP workstations to windows (Electrical Design Software | E3.series | Zuken EN[^])
There is no way to rebuild all of this in WPF, MAUI or what ever.
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WinForms does what I need when I need a GUI, which is rare.
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Lots of good answers, and from my 4+ decades of experience as a professional developer (now retired), I suspect its a combination. So, allow me to weigh in with some of my own thoughts:
My experience includes Win16/Win32 APIs (C), MFC (C,C++), WinForms (C#) and WPF (C#, Framework and Core). While I agree with the sentiment that one must keep moving forward in a professional setting (i.e. clients as the end users), I also have endured the pain of being unable to upgrade because of client budget, incompatibilities, and developer culture.
In addition, much of the move from C/C++ to .NET and across GUI platforms was made both easier and more difficult with COM, remoting, COM InterOp (RCWs/CCWs), as well as XML and JSON. When I was heavily invested in COM, I used WTL (Windows Template Library) for my GUIs when working in C++. WTL cannot replace MFC (it was never meant to), but for most applications it can hold it's own.
Here's the thing... I still love C/C++, it's often the only choice for me when I worked on embedded projects (think Eclipse IDE, etc.). That being said, C# is soooo much easier to work with, is in many ways more powerful and is as performant. That leaves me wondering why C/C++ for a Windows GUI project.
When it comes to which GUI platform in the C# world, WinForms "strength" is also it's weakness. If you have ever tried to implement components, or have to copy/reuse/resize a form and its subsequent components, you know how incredibly difficult that can be. Add in language support and it becomes a night mare.
On the other hand, WPF is indeed a steep learning curve, but what you trade for in return is extensibility and full theming and language support in XAML through control and data templates, styles, etc. Once you use and master WPF, there's no going back!
One could punt and use WPF in a minimalist way by using a Grid control and just plop controls in fixed positions. One could avoid learning a large part of WPF, but that's like buying a Ferrari only to transport people around by dragging it behind a tow truck.
So I do get it's context dependent, such that there are still a great many developers that choose alternate paths. Sometimes there's no compelling reason when, for example, supporting a legacy application that no longer is viable to port or upgrade. I also do defend the right of hobbyists to pick their poison. I still love, now again, to fire up my Trash80, if for no other reason, than to see if ChatGPT ports to Z-80 really work!
One group notably missing from those that responded are VB/VB.NET developers. It's very easy to take cheap shots at both, but I would think at least VB.NET would be a popular choice given its similarities to WinForms, and the fact that many of us cut our teeth on some form of interpreted BASIC on older vintage hardware. NewDOS, DOSPLus and LDOS (TRS-80 DOSs) all offered significant powerful features to BASIC, and I wrote and supported commercial application back in the 80s. While C++ and C# captured my heart years ago, I will always have a place in my heart for BASIC.
...and maybe assembly language, since the Z-80 and the 6502 were my first forays into learning to write software on the TRS-80 and Apple II/II Plus.
Well, that's my two shekels.
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Stacy, being semi-retired (which has been a fail, lol) I think one of the reasons I've seen is that basically we're often assigned to build things and it's not worth the learning curve to accomplish the given task. So, the default is using the tools you know.
I live in my odd world of C#/VB .NET, PHP, and JS along with some of its variants. One project is an 'agile-RAD' large desktop app using WinForms and VB.net. There's no budget to recode in C# or anything else, and no real reason to do so since there's no scalability requirement; the number of users will never be greater than a few dozen. Their needs change regularly with quick implementation required. Their apps are heavily data-driven pulling from Postgres and DB changes aren't unusual. The datagridview control is a staple for their needs, which has both pros and cons to its WPF counterpart.
Oops, back to your question. If someone asked me for a desktop app today from scratch, it would be in VS; likely C# but I wouldn't totally rule out VB depending on the specs. I know there's differences, but for a lot of things they can be negligible. Winforms vs WPF is a deeper design consideration. In truth today, it's rare to see a 'from scratch' app that doesn't have interaction with either existing DBs, the web or some other requirements. I use more contract work where required in some cases to maintain sanity.
Though... I'm working on a project that has a large PHP codebase and a proposed new piece requires it to play nice with a Node-JS API app. My colleague of 30 years told me that "I'm crossing over to the dark side".
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Stacy Dudovitz wrote: One group notably missing from those that responded are VB/VB.NET developers. It's very easy to take cheap shots at both, but I would think at least VB.NET would be a popular choice given its similarities to WinForms, and the fact that many of us cut our teeth on some form of interpreted BASIC on older vintage hardware. About 75% of my work assignments in the 90's were VB (v2 through v6), and it was THE way to produce solid business applications for Windows quickly. Friends who worked in other technologies looked down upon VB, but I was producing in 3 months what they were taking a year+ to do. And I had my pick of assignments there was so much work.
Fast forward to 2003 -- VB.NET had been out 2 years and VB6 work was slowing down. I had ridden the bleeding edge since graduation, so I jumped on the VB.NET bandwagon, assuming it was the logical progression.
It wasn't. There was no progression, it was a BASIC-like language that had nothing to do with Visual Basic. MS published an "upgrade wizard" ... anyone who tried it knows how well it [didn't] work.
After a year or so, I switched to C#, as it was getting solid support from MS AND there was a good job market. It's been 20 years and I do not regret that decision. The skillset has kept me employed and will do so until I retire. Yes, I keep up with other technologies and if there's a downturn in the C# market, I'll jump ship.
WinForms is the follow-on to what made VB so useful. It works and works well -- if developing Windows desktop applications. With the Click-Once installers, we deploy to SharePoint and our installation problems are about 5% of what they are in other technologies.
Regarding CORE and new C# versions?
Both change way too quickly for business needs, and a lot of what's released is not necessary or useful to folks whose primary job is solving business problems quickly and efficiently.
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Brilliant post. (VB is an odd duck; it's component based; not object oriented; but it gained my interest in components that I fashion extensively to this day).
"Before entering on an understanding, I have meditated for a long time, and have foreseen what might happen. It is not genius which reveals to me suddenly, secretly, what I have to say or to do in a circumstance unexpected by other people; it is reflection, it is meditation." - Napoleon I
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WPF was the last product of the Old Microsoft. It has a steep learning curve, it's purpose is to make a Windows application not looking like a Windows application (formerly known as skinning), so it is not really for LoB apps.
The Cool Kids on the Code Block developed MVVM for it, which is a method to disrupt the normal way of the flow of information between the GUI and the backend (see validation), so it is not really for LoB apps.
Everything beyond that is just the usual dumbing down of Windows to the UNIX/Machintos level.
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About the bonus question:
There are better platforms for VB6, for example VBForums.
There are probably only a few questions for VB.Net syntax. Framework questions can also be answered via C# answers. That's how I do it.
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A bunch of reasons:
1) In most cases WPF doesn't solve anything that WinForm can't solve. The amount of customizations and pipelines that you can make with WPF are useful on large interconnected desktop applications - which aren't many;
2) WPF and .NET documentation sucks terribly. It's a giant reference manual without any explanations on how the various pieces should be glued together. This situation is improving, too slowly.
3) WPF does not support native development, WinForms supports both native and .NET. It wins.
4) WPF is simple. Most of the time the real work is behind the scenes and you really need a UI only to interact, briefly, with the backend. The tool I'm maintaining to flash and operate on the equipment manifactured by my company for example would not benefit from the additional complexity of WPF: we need a bunch of buttons, a bunch of textboxes and some radio button or combobox, and the occasional slider.
GCS/GE d--(d) s-/+ a C+++ U+++ P-- L+@ E-- W+++ N+ o+ K- w+++ O? M-- V? PS+ PE Y+ PGP t+ 5? X R+++ tv-- b+(+++) DI+++ D++ G e++ h--- r+++ y+++* Weapons extension: ma- k++ F+2 X
The shortest horror story: On Error Resume Next
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Could you explain point #3 -- what you mean that WPF does not support native development?
If you are referring to APIs such as Win32 (or any DLL with Exports), that's what PInvoke is for, and is GUI agnostic. COM and COM InterOp is also fully supported.
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I use WPF almost exclusively.
I have to admit it was a very steep learning curve, but now I will not touch WinForms anymore.
The new flavours of XAML are not fit for purpose. (UWP, WinUI, MAUI)
This is the biggest mistake made by Microsoft: Having multiple dialects of XAML.
Why incompatible versions of XAML.
If we have a WPF project, we can't 'upgrade' it to something more modern without months (years) of work and bucketloads of money.
C++ is for bare metal programming. We will NEVER use C++ with a GUI.
And for VB6:
I worked for a company that used VB6 for their main applications.
They didn't want to rewrite in WPF, so I left.
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VB6 Dead... I hope so... have a feeling as stuff breaks it will emerge from the depths to haunt us (COBOL made a comeback a few years ago!!)
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COBOL didn't make a comeback. It's been there all along, doing its job. In 1981 I was told that COBOL was a dead language and no one should learn it ... 40+ years later it's still the backbone of many large organizations, both government and private sector.
IIRC, it hit the news because too many of the programmers were retiring without replacements. That's a serious problem -- a friend of mine came out of retirement 3 time for mainframe projects. My group is ready to retire its last MF program, replacing it with a web app. The primary MF programmer retired 6 years ago and his understudy retired in December, so we're on the edge.
I watch the VB news, simply out of curiosity. There are (or were) several groups trying to revive it. And there are VB6 and VBA jobs out there. I wouldn't recommend it for new grads as the future looks negative, but ya never know. In the mid-90's I didn't think Java was viable ...
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If you don't need advanced/fancy UI Microsoft itself suggest to use WinForms.
WPF is for "media" applications, not for enterprises.
Data centric desktop applications are super easy to build with WinForms, that is also revamped now in .Net Core.
If you add to the recipe ReactiveUI then you will have a modern application, fully testable, protecting you investments for the next 10sh years.
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The decision maker receives a prototype within 3 days. And then he can't understand that the final version (with a more maintainable GUI) should take 6 months.
But we have hope. Maybe someone will build an AI that turns a WinForms application into a functioning, well-described and easy-to-extend WPF application.
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For your first and last (bonus) question: I write in VB and mostly Winforms.
Why still WinForms or other older technologies?
Because older technologies are proven. And invested in.
I have build a complete ecosystem around Winforms during my career, that will cost a fortune to migrate to WPF or any other GUI framework. Further, the ease of the designer and also the ease of runtime generated UI code - not matched by any other GUI framework. And, as most of my software will run on Remote Desktop - al lot of them with high latency and none with GPU acceleration - no other framework gives the same userexperience (performance) as WinForms.
Why VB?
Because I started out as a Basic Programmer in the nineties, and VB does all I need.
The Bonus question - why you don't see much VB on Code Project or anywhere else.
That's because we learned. As soon as you ask your question in VB, you are not taken seriously. So, we just convert anything to C# before we ask a question.
The same for an article. If it's VB, the chance is really small that it will be allowed. So, also in this case, we convert it to C# and publish it without a problem. Or just gave up and do not try to share anymore.
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While Microsoft denies it, they have largely abandoned VB.NET developers.
I'm a VB.NET web developer, and there is no way forward with Microsoft's newer .NET Core framework and VB.NET. Razor Pages or Blazor would be great for me if I could code in VB.NET, but instead I have to switch to C#. It also means my web applications have no migration path.
Sure, I can switch to C#, but it truly pisses me off that they have left me hanging in this way.
So why am I still choosing this older technology?
* There is nothing wrong with it.
* I have a LOT of existing VB.NET projects that I support for clients, and with no migration path, I'm leaving them as is. My clients don't pay me to rewrite apps just to change the language/technology with no tangible benefit for them.
* I have some C# projects that I support, but I don't enjoy it. VB.NET is a joy to me, which makes me very productive.
* I am stubborn.
--Pissed off VB.NET web programmer
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I hear you! I'm one of those rare folks that like the VB.net/WPF combination.
I actually went from VBA to VB.net and pretty much skipped classic VB all together.
I've never understood how C# became the defacto MS language other than it's [only slightly] less verbose. The case sensitivity in C# is the thing that really makes me not want to use it...Of course, this is just my humble opinion. I'm sure there are reasons that C# works better for others.
But with all that said, these days I'm in a role where I don't do any coding, and with the current software development landscape, I'm pretty okay with that.
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Yep, case sensitivity is pretty annoying to me, too.
Those of us who started with .NET 1.0 were told for years that selecting C# or VB.NET was a "lifestyle choice", and either was fine. And I believed them.
I can even understand that there is no easy migration path for the move from WebForms to MVC or Razor Pages. I get it. But now I'm supposed to not only completely rewrite all these web applications, I'm also supposed to do it in a completely different language? Not a chance.
You are lucky you are out of coding these days. While I love writing code, I don't love the current software development landscape, as you put it.
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Our own heavy-duty native C++ scientific application is built around the MFC framework. Despite our toying with several shiny new things from Microsoft over the last couple of decades, we somehow continue to see MFC and Qt as being the only serious contenders. Please keep all those MFC tips and tweaks coming. Your audience is still very much out there.
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I’ve never done anything in C++ or MFC or WPF so I can’t comment on any of those. For most of my career I’ve worked in some version of Basic (DEC Basic, GW Basic, Borland Turbo Basic, MS Access Basic, VB for DOS, VB6, VB.Net, VBA) and then more recently got into C#. Worked for over 13 years on a legacy app that was written mostly in VB6 with some com interop stuff written in VB.Net and C#.
Basic isn’t completely dead. After the 13 year gig ended I ended up working for a place that had some VB6 code that needed to be maintained while they were going through a conversion. A couple years ago I worked for a mortgage company who used a popular loan origination system called Encompass. It allows company to setup rules that look very much like Basic (actually, I think you can write them in C# as well but not sure about that).
I have to say that I actually enjoy working in C# way more than Basic but if I ever find myself unemployed, I won’t necessarily turn down a job just because it’s in Basic.
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I've been programming in MFC C++ since its inception. And Microsoft has been maintaining it completely. MFC has survived and been significantly enhanced by all of the C++xx upgrades. Just yesterday, after working all day with Copilot, we finally solved a particular coding goal of being able to instantiate either a common implementation or a specialized implementation controlled by one explicit template line of code. All type safe. All ODR compliant. Anyway, my point is, MFC has always been the most future-protected choice for me and well as close-to-the-metal performance, all without inserting extra layers of indirection.
Ever since I read Jeff Prosise's book on MFC where he wrote about the speed and coding beauty of the low-lying connection to the OS, I was hooked. A layer of indirection means you are dependent on that vendor's development whims which jeopardizes your code. Yes, I am dependent on Microsoft, but my C++ code is by and large not and could be ported. That can't be said of my code if I were dependent on other layers and ephemeral programming languages. I want my code to survive forever. Is that so bad?
modified 3-Mar-24 8:06am.
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I find Windows Forms' popularity in 2024 inexplicable, I'll be honest, but I will defend MFC and WPF.
If you want to use C++ and want to fully leverage Windows and aren't worried about cross-platform, there's still no better option than MFC. The thing to remember about MFC is it literally is a set of FOUNDATION classes. You can still utilize every modern Win32 API you want to. MFC just takes care of the most obnoxious parts of the scaffolding and UI interactions that you really don't want to be dealing with, and it's stuff in Windows that hasn't changed in decades. So MFC really by definition will continue to be relevant and usable indefinitely as long as Windows exists, most likely, and really needs no significant updates. Your alternative is to use pure Win32 with no helper framework. If you really want to do that, you might as well just write in assembly too.
WPF is in a somewhat similar boat except it's C# and XAML. It is infinitely flexible and extensible. I mean, there's literally no application UI you can conceive that you can't do in WPF given that you can completely retemplate any control and even use Direct3D if you want to. You might be doing a lot of the work yourself, but it's doable, so again, it sort of by definition has an indefinite shelf life.
As for Forms, it's more or less the C# equivalent of MFC, but WPF offers far more flexibility in customizing UI, so unless you hate XAML for some reason (though you actually don't HAVE to use XAML if you really don't want to) I don't see why you'd pick Forms over WPF today. Nonetheless it is on par with MFC and WPF in terms of reliability and scalability so I also don't begrudge anyone who uses it.
Other than those three (MFC,WPF,and Forms), none of Microsoft's application frameworks are suitable for enterprise or commercial productivity applications. UWP is more or less on par (IMO) with Android and iOS for dinky consumer "apps" but out of the question for anything that needs to scale. WinUI3 came with a lot of hype but years later still suffers from stability problems, and not being open source I'm not going to let myself be 100% reliant on Microsoft to fix their bugs or find workarounds (wait, I guess it finally is open source as of late last year, so maybe that will be an option soon). MAUI (nee Xamarin Forms) is a sad parody of its former self. Blazor Hybrid, I don't even know what the @!%*% that's supposed to be.
And Visual Basic? Well remember VB.NET is just a programming language and is actually equivalent to C# line-by-line. Based on Stackoverflow questions people still use VB.NET both with WinForms and WPF. So it's not like VB is an alternative to WPF or Forms; it's an alternative to C# and still alive. It ain't my cup of tea but some people I imagine just find the syntax more approachable.
modified 28-Feb-24 14:41pm.
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