![]() But I am suggesting you owe it to yourself to at least try things first.ģ) NOTHING is going to be better 100% of the time. NET the framework, C# the language, or VS.NET the IDE is any better than the combination of tools you’re using now. But that starts with actually using something first – not talking about it without trying it. Nobody cares but you.Ģ) A big lesson in business is to learn what your competitors do better than you and use that knowledge to improve your business and your products. I’ll admit I also prefer NetBeans over Eclipse for the same overall reason – it just feels better to me.ġ) Use what you want. Visual Studio Matrix (free) is nice, too. Help me out – I really need a good one.). The debugging in VS.NET is just great (I’m really curious to know if people can suggest a good PHP debugging toolkit – really. It’s easy, fluid, and clear (I’ve been using XCode for ~10 years and I still find VS.NET easier to deal with). I don’t really see a “deal killer” feature that’s missing when you really get down to comparing things. Sure, the frameworks are structured differently and the language you use can give things a different flavor as you code, but… they all provide mostly comparable services at this point. All in all, I don’t find a lot of these technologies all that terribly different when it comes to what they ultimately provide. I get paid to solve business problems using technology, not take up a religious position. ASP.NET (C# and VB.Net), Java, PHP, even a bit of Objective-C here and there. I use a LOT of different tools for both work and personal projects. Anyone who dishes on a “competitive” technology without even trying it doesn’t exactly have a lot of credibility IMO. Yeah – I find the bashing without experience a very disturbing trend. ![]()
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