|
A programmer is supposed to head out to a annual computer science conference somewhere abroad, but instead of leaving he runs around the house nervous and mad, looking in every corner and opening every closet and door... Finally his wife asks him: "What`s wrong? Why are you running around, making a mess all over the place?" The programmer replies: "I can`t find my last bag and I`m late for my flight?" - "How many bags do you have?" asks the wife... ""Three, but I need the fourth. I know I brought them down this morning and now ones missing." - "Honey, there they are, all four bags. Look." - "No, there`s only... *zero, one, two, three*... three of them... Where`s the fourth??? I don`t see it."
A software engineer's wife ask him to go to the shops to get a carton of milk, and she says to him "if they have eggs, get 6." later, the software engineer comes back with 6 cartons of milk. His wife is surprised and asks why he bought 6, he replies "They had eggs"

|
|
|
|
|
The C# project started almost five years ago, in December 1998, with the goal to create a
simple, modern, object-oriented, and type-safe programming language for the new and yet
to be named .NET platform. Since then, C# has come a long way. The language is now in
use by hundreds of thousands of programmers, it has been standardized by both ECMA
and ISO/IEC, and the development of a second version of the language with several major
new features is close to completion
Many people have been involved in the creation of the C# language. The language design
team for C# 1.0 consisted of Anders Hejlsberg, Scott Wiltamuth, Peter Golde, Peter Sollich,
and Eric Gunnerson. For C# 2.0, the language design team consisted of Anders Hejlsberg,
Peter Golde, Peter Hallam, Shon Katzenberger, Todd Proebsting, and Anson Horton.
Furthermore, the design and implementation of generics in C# and the .NET Common
Language Runtime is based on the “Gyro” prototype built by Don Syme and Andrew
Kennedy of Microsoft Research.
Prabhat Kumar Mishra
|
|
|
|