|
|
Comments and Discussions
|
|
 |

|
Hi, I actually i done crystal reports in windows apps but, i dont know how to
implement crystalreports in using Asp.net2.0 with C#.Can you plz tel me how to implement crystalreports using Asp.net2.0 with C#.plz tel me.
|
|
|
|

|
Even before 7.0 was released, we started getting all this crap about the standard not being (largely) met until 7.1 came out. That is, we still have to wait until yet another piece of vapour-ware makes it into the real world. When Microsoft actually releases a standard C++ compiler, let me know. Until then, don't waste my time with this baloney - I certainly will not be wasting my money on the current release...
|
|
|
|

|
The idea of mc++ as an end in itself - rather than just a stepping stone between C++ and C# - is quite interesting.
Hopefully, under the guidance of Herb - MS will focus on improving mc++ (and the compliance of the C++ compiler) in version 7.1.
But I thought that MSIL was fundamentally ill-suited to C++ (eg. MI, templates)? Can this be changed?
TomM
|
|
|
|

|
Hummm. MS care about a standard that it didnt write?
Well, this article gives me some hope. I look forward to seeing VC7.1.
Tom.
|
|
|
|

|
Attend a C++ standards meeting. I was pleasantly surprised to see a lot of commitment from MS at the one I attended. Of course I attended the one hosted by MS, but I didn't get the feeling that that had anything to do with it. Further, most of the folks on the committee were sensing the same changes that I did. The conclusion being reached, with out any inside knowledge, was that something had changed in the management (such as someone leaving) that allowed the developers to assert their strong feelings that the standard was important.
William E. Kempf
|
|
|
|

|
Microsoft have for the last several years by their actions and words basically told us C++ developers "piss off, you're unwanted, use VB or something - besides, we're too incompetent to create a C++ compiler".
The reason they got their C++ compiler to a decent state at all at the time (around 1995? take or leave a few years) was that they managed to buy Borland C++ developers. On their own they were a total disaster up to that buy.
Some years later they released MSVC 6.0, the newest and greatest. Well what do you know, it was basically a service-pack for MSVC 5.0 (and also using the HTML MSDN-viewer that made the old Media Viewer MVB look and act like heaven! Have you ever seen a slower help-system on Windows than their HTML stuff?).
Then they, righfully, got flamed and bashed all over the place for creating a "C++" compiler with such lousy support for the C++ language, that it a year after its release was the laughing stock and you could read in post after post to e.g. c.l.c++.m "It's MSVC", "MSVC bug", "Microsoft compiler bug"... After many years of this abuse and proven inability and unwillingness to care about C++, obviously it's more than hard to respect or believe in that company when it comes to C++ compilers (judging from the microsoft.public.dotnet.languages.vc NG VC7 is also a pig, and it seems there's a growing mass that deliberately stays away from it at least another dot-release until, if ever, MS get their act together).
Now they in quick succession hires (previously?) credible people to do... Exactly what? Convince people they're committed to C++? Calm the masses? Put oil on the waves?
Are they (MS) really expecting us to believe that they are seriously trying to conform to an international standard, when they during their whole existance only displayed their good for one thing, and making compilers isn't one of those things?
If, becuse I'd be a damned fool to say "when", they ever display something resembling a C++ 98 compiler, I can bet my furry ass that it's after the C++0x standard has been ratified.
They are proven liars, cheaters, monopoly, incompetent, and just about every other foul word you can come to think of. Do they expect us to hang on to their crap with just the hope that these people will change anything?!
Herb: I'm truly sorry to see you have to go this way, but I guess we all have to eat...
---
- Any 'net transmitted diseases are promoted by Microsoft
|
|
|
|

|
Too bad this rant doesn't have much to do with reality.
Tim Smith
I know what you're thinking punk, you're thinking did he spell check this document? Well, to tell you the truth I kinda forgot myself in all this excitement. But being this here's CodeProject, the most powerful forums in the world and would blow your head clean off, you've got to ask yourself one question, Do I feel lucky? Well do ya punk?
|
|
|
|

|
Take a valium, and call me in the morning.
Mike Nordell wrote:
They are proven liars, cheaters, monopoly, incompetent, and just about every other foul word you can come to think of. Do they expect us to hang on to their crap with just the hope that these people will change anything?!
If you feel this strongly, why are you here ?
Christian
The tragedy of cyberspace - that so much can travel so far, and yet mean so little.
"I'm thinking of getting married for companionship and so I have someone to cook and clean." - Martin Marvinski, 6/3/2002
|
|
|
|

|
Everything you say is true, but maybe things will change. I guess we will have to wait and see what version 7.1 looks like. Then we will know if Sutter sold out.
BTW, funny isnt it that MS is all you say it is, and yet here we all are. I guess we all sold out.
TomM.
|
|
|
|

|
TomM wrote:
I guess we all sold out.
I don't see it as selling out. I'm a mercenary - absolute loyalty to the highest bidder. For many, many years now, the jobs have been with VC++, so that's where I've been. I started on Borland Turbo C 1.0 (DOS). If there was more work there, I'd be in the Borland camp. For that matter, if it was where the jobs were, I'd be coding for Macs. I love programming, but this ain't religion - it's how I pay my bills. When I'm feeling philosophical, I go home, take the phone off the hook and code what I feel like playing with. However, I look after my livelihood not with idealism, but with common sense.
I must say one other thing. I often disagree with what they do, or how they do it. However (er, much like America), they seem to be the company that everyone loves to hate, primarily because they were so hugely successful. When they were the half dozen scruffy looking hippies going up against IBM, we all loved them because they were chasing the American Dream. However, once they achieved it (the little guy kicks Big Blue's tail), we hate them. So who's the hypocrite here?
A business, any business, has one goal and priority - profitability. That's why they exist. Market domination and the elimination of competition is a path to that goal. Business is war. Microsoft didn't create that reality - they just have to cope with it. You can be sure that their competition would have done exactly the same to them were they able.
Chistopher Duncan
Author - The Career Programmer: Guerilla Tactics for an Imperfect World (Apress)
|
|
|
|
 |
|
|
General News Suggestion Question Bug Answer Joke Rant Admin
|
Herb Sutter has just joined Microsoft as their new Visual C++ .NET community guy. Read about who he is, what he does, and what is happening with our beloved Visual C++.
| Type | Article |
| Licence | CPOL |
| First Posted | 12 Mar 2002 |
| Views | 354,594 |
| Bookmarked | 18 times |
|
|