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Survey Results

Are you excited about .NET 2.0?   [Edit]

Survey period: 15 Nov 2004 to 21 Nov 2004

.NET 2.0 promises to bring a bunch of innovations and new features to make our lives wonderful. But do you care?

OptionVotes% 
I'm very excited41026.23
I'm looking forward to it51332.82
I'm slightly interested in it27617.66
I'm not that interested in it20713.24
I don't want to know about it15710.04



 
GeneralRe: Is Microsoft Going Little Fast Pin
ThatsAlok14-Nov-04 21:59
ThatsAlok14-Nov-04 21:59 
GeneralRe: Is Microsoft Going Little Fast Pin
Anonymous15-Nov-04 8:42
Anonymous15-Nov-04 8:42 
GeneralRe: Is Microsoft Going Little Fast Pin
Robert M Greene19-Nov-04 3:57
Robert M Greene19-Nov-04 3:57 
GeneralRe: Is Microsoft Going Little Fast Pin
ed welch21-Nov-04 2:56
ed welch21-Nov-04 2:56 
GeneralRe: Is Microsoft Going Little Fast Pin
Arjan Einbu14-Nov-04 22:15
Arjan Einbu14-Nov-04 22:15 
GeneralRe: Is Microsoft Going Little Fast Pin
ThatsAlok14-Nov-04 23:05
ThatsAlok14-Nov-04 23:05 
GeneralRe: Is Microsoft Going Little Fast Pin
Michael P Butler14-Nov-04 23:47
Michael P Butler14-Nov-04 23:47 
GeneralRe: Is Microsoft Going Little Fast Pin
Dale Thompson15-Nov-04 11:03
Dale Thompson15-Nov-04 11:03 
Michael P Butler wrote:
Whilst the benefits of C# and .NET are obvious once you start to using them, I still feel that Microsoft's developer resources such as MSDN spend too much time on the "cool" and flashy features rather than showing us how .NET can make our actual development lives better. Where are the examples that show us how to solve the day-to-day problems that we face during the development process?

While this question may seem obvious - it has few obvious answers. Part of the problem is that one person's problem is not necessarily another person's problem.

There are many articles available (some great ones are right here on CodeProject). But there isn't one reference on how to do everything.

You need to start by understanding the .NET idioms - they are similar to Java idioms, but quite a bit different from C++ or Win32 idioms. Once you get your feet wet - it becomes pretty obvious that .NET is nearly orthogonal (the consistency of the API alone is a huge step forward).

But there are so many benefits. Just start googling topics of interest and include "C#" - you are likely to find something good.

Dale Thompson
GeneralRe: Is Microsoft Going Little Fast Pin
KevinHall16-Nov-04 7:10
KevinHall16-Nov-04 7:10 
GeneralRe: Is Microsoft Going Little Fast Pin
Alexander Tereshchenko16-Nov-04 12:47
Alexander Tereshchenko16-Nov-04 12:47 

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