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| Microsoft Visual Studio .NET Professional 2002 | 
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| From: Microsoft Software Category: Software
List Price: $1,079.00 Buy New: $199.97 You Save: $879.03 (81%)
New (10) Used (4) from $79.00
Avg. Customer Rating: 15 reviews Sales Rank: 6994
Format: Cd-rom Platforms: Windows Nt, Windows 2000, Windows Xp Media: CD-ROM Edition: Professional Shipping Weight (lbs): 5 Dimensions (in): 3.7 x 3.1 x 0.9
MPN: 659-00844 UPC: 659556875992 EAN: 0659556875992 ASIN: B00005RV4Z
Release Date: February 13, 2002 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Customer Reviews:
| Showing reviews 11-15 of 15 | | « PREV | | |
Price to high! February 11, 2002 9 out of 69 found this review helpful
This product is NOT so revolutionary as Microsoft tries to present. Anyway, even writing a web tools with a help of it will limit you on MS platforms...
My Review January 27, 2002 All developers already loving the beta version of this product. The standard version will be a immediate success, like all other Microsoft products. It will show a clear path for future net programming. Even, new entrants to programming can build all types of applications with ease using this technology. This product will set standards for net programming. Once again, it is the innovation and ease of use of the product is secret behind the success of this product.
If you're serious about Windows development January 23, 2002 7 out of 9 found this review helpful
If you're serious about Windows development, this is definetly a 'must have' The IDE has been vastly improved over Visual Studio 6, and is shared among all languages. And talking about languages: more than fifty different languages are being ported to .NET, such as Python and Perl. Visual Studio.net comes with C# a new language developed by microsoft which should make any C or C++ Developer feel at home.
Finally... a real IDE for Web developers! January 20, 2002 9 out of 9 found this review helpful
Been using VS.NET since beta 2, and the final version is everything I've ever wanted. I was a former ASP script kiddie, but because of the outstanding object-oriented VB.NET, and even better C#, I can now code Web apps like a "real" developer. I can see Windows programmers asking, "Wait, you mean it wasn't always done that way?"There are some minor annoyances, like the fact that VS.NET won't use Intellisense when you write code right on an ASP.NET page (come on MS, a code-behind file isn't necessary for three lines of code). It's also not terribly idiot-proof setting up remote debugging. The greatest thing to me is that SQL Server's Enterprise manager is, in a matter of speaking, integrated into the environment, so you're not alt-tabing to see what the heck your DB looks like. If you hate the state of Web development, you need this.
The Great Leap Forward January 3, 2002 55 out of 64 found this review helpful
My apologies to Chairman Mao, but I've been using the beta version of VS.Net for several weeks now, and its advances are impressive. For VB programmers, there is a new, fully object-oriented version of the language that stands on an equal footing with C. For C++ programmers, there is C#, which combines the power of C with the RAD features of VB. It really is possible to knock out a Windows application in a morning! Finally, for Java programmers who are a bit frustrated with the quirks of that language, C# is a Java clone that is easy to learn, that has most of the power that Java left out, and that has a really spectacular IDE. I haven't raved about anything since VB3, but I'm raving about this.
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