lou_dias wrote:
mdma wrote:
So you prefer it. The whole point that everyone else is trying to make to you is that just because you prefer it, that doesn't make it superior to everything else.
No, everyone including you are saying that I have an inferior intellect for preferring it. The difference being I never cared what anyone else preferred...not one iota...
Now you are getting a little paranoid. Nobody has said you are intellectually inferior for preferring VB but people have questioned your judgement as to why you didn't like C/C++. Or rather why you claim "suck ass" and are "fugly", why we should recognise VB's superiority and then give some of the least well reasoned arguments I have read that aren't even consistent across several posts.
You also made yourself look silly in the way you criticised not only C/C++ as languages but those who prefer it over Basic syntax and their attitudes, or that C/C++ is somehow a dead or stagnant language not used by more than a handful of geeks and eschewed by the buisness world, or by throwing down the "what can C do that VB cant?" gauntlet when it is patently obvious that C's scope is wider than VB.net and so there are whole avenues of development for which C can be used and VB.net can't. Wether or not that's different "in 40 years time" is irrelavent today.
C has already stood that particular test of time, given birth to several syntactically related languages and wether you like it or not is here to stay.
In the end, the only person inferring you are a bit silly is yourself because you cannot separate your preference for a language over another from its inherent capabilities overall. You like it, therefore it is better. You don't like C, therefore it is inferior, starting right back at your first post on the matter. Hardly well reasoned.
As for the rest of the people, we recognise tools that are good for particular jobs. VB is good as a RAD tool under windows etc, but it is not the best RAD tool available. Java is a good choice for web / mobile devices, but it is not the best tool for large scale application development (even though the language itself is quite nice). PHP is a good choice for rapid development of server pages and other scripted applications but it's not so good for making desktop applications. Asm is good for low level embedded work / driver layer and performance critical code but it is not so good for full scale application development.
There is one language that is actually quite useable for all these purposes and more. And it isn't VB. It's C.