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| Microsoft Visual Basic Professional 6.0 with Plus Pack | 
enlarge | From: Microsoft Software Category: Software
List Price: $549.99 Buy New: $258.00 You Save: $291.99 (53%)
New (8) from $258.00
Avg. Customer Rating: 15 reviews Sales Rank: 2381
Format: Cd-rom Platforms: Windows Nt, Windows 98, Windows 2000, Windows 95 Media: CD-ROM Edition: Professional with Plus Pack Shipping Weight (lbs): 2 Dimensions (in): 9.5 x 7.8 x 2.9
Model: 203-00768 ASIN: B00002S7HR
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Customer Reviews:
| Showing reviews 1-5 of 15 | | NEXT » |
bait and switch July 24, 2006 9 out of 9 found this review helpful
I ordered Microsoft Visual Basic Professional 6.0 with Plus Pack,as advertized. I received VB 4.0, so be very careful when dealing on here. I am finished with this venue to purchase items that are integral to my work. Every piece of advertisement stated VB6.0...... but the seller (msblissbooklist) was dishonest. USE CARE when dealing with this seller. She has refused to answer 5 e-mails.
Microsoft's Greatest Gift June 21, 2006 7 out of 7 found this review helpful
My programming experience: Fortran -> Basic -> QuickBasic -> Assembly Language linked to QuickBasic -> finally Visual Basic 6. I've written thousands of pages of code for VB6. To the reviewer who wrote that Visual Basic is for "toy applications", I hope he's grown-up since 2000. Apparently he doesn't understand the power of this program. The complexity that VB6 allows is limited only by a programmer's intelligence and imagination.
I am very disappointed in the direction that Microsoft took by dropping VB6 and going in the direction of VB.Net. There is room in the world for both VB6 and Net. I sense that the intellectual incest of certain system oriented "C" purests went into making that decision. Unfortunately, everthing in life eventually becomes political, especially company politics, and great ideas can become trivialized. I may one day learn "Net", but I can't scrap my existing code. I need VB6 and Net to work together.
I've survived using VB Learning Edition for years, which is amazing. I found VB Professional Edition on this site before it goes into extinction, simply because I need one control, "Internet Transfer Control" - otherwise Learning Edition has satisfied all my needs writing very complex programs.
The best development tool in the world. August 22, 2005 9 out of 9 found this review helpful
Easy to learn, providing lightning fast application development, worldwide supported, intuitive. It sounds like a Microsoft commercial, but it's my honest opinions about Visual Basic 6.
Underrated in performance when it comes to execution speed. If somebody tells you that speed is a con with VB6 that is not true. This is also the fastest Visual Basic version (including VB.NET).
Visual Basic 6 has never failed me. It simply is the best development tool.
Great MS Developmental tool September 8, 2002 7 out of 9 found this review helpful
This is a great tool! I have use it with numberous MS office apps, created games, software from Db and Dna 2k utilization. Going from Quick Basic to VB3 to VB5. VB6 has the better libray and the ultilization of COM+ and DirectX the horizon is virtually endless.
Good for end-user interface but not much else October 22, 2001 19 out of 29 found this review helpful
VB is probably the best language Microsoft has spit up so far. This latest edition adds some nice features for doing tasks with minimal thought. It's really worthless for trying to do anything beyond simple programs(Meaning not much code) created using pre-done libraries and controls(*.OCX). But that's what's so nice about it. Let's say you developed foo program for bar OS (Foo and Bar are standard variables used commonly in programming groups), and wanted to bring it over to windows, making all of foo's features excessible through GUI. Simple enough, just copy the source not associated with bar's GUI and compile it into a DLL or OCX then use VB to associate methods and with the Windows GUI. Very handy especially when doing cross platform development. The main reason it lost points with me is due to the price...truly insane! I could see even $100 being tolerable but $500 is ludicrous, but I guess this price just reminds us that Micro$oft is behind this, otherwise decent, tool.Note: Any kiddies out their wanting to learn a language, DON'T start with this(Try Perl instead). It teaches terrible habits that are hard to grow out of, making it difficult to learn other languages, and will get you reamed by your college professors. The major things are: 1)Everything is shown while typeing. So typing in "foobar." shows everything associated with foobar. 2)Case errors are automatically corrected. 3)Variable types are too easy to work with. There are very few real languages that let you call a 'variant' type (Although Perl handles most of it's types of variables in a similar manner). Hope this helped anyone considering spending the $500.
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