This link has been bookmarked by 19 people . It was first bookmarked on 14 Oct 2008, by Philip Guth.
-
03 Feb 09
-
14 Oct 08
-
To put this aim in context, we need to look back to the inception of .NET, which was in the late nineties or early 2000s. At that time, Microsoft’s primary developer offerings were fairly fragmented. For native code we had C++ with MFC, and ATL and so forth. And then for rapid application development we had Visual Basic, and for web development we had IIS and ASP.
-
Each language was its own little silo with different solutions to all of the different programming problems. You couldn’t transfer your skills and your application model implicitly became your choice of programming language. We really wanted to unify these separate entities to better leverage our efforts.
-
-
10 Oct 08
-
04 Oct 08
Slobodan PavkovMicrosoft's Anders Hejlsberg reveals the history behind one of the most common programming languages, C#, and what the future holds for C#4.0.
c# c#4.0 .net andershejlsberg programming people microsoft languages delphi turbopascal history interview importedfromdelicious
-
03 Oct 08
-
02 Oct 08
-
01 Oct 08
Would you like to comment?
Join Diigo for a free account, or sign in if you are already a member.