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Thread: Help!! Newbie!!

  1. #1
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    Smile Help!! Newbie!!

    Can Someone Help Me!!! Decide Between C++.net And Basic.net?????
    Am Only 15 So I Am Beggining Any Suggestions???
    Reply's Greatly Aprreciated!!!!

  2. #2
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    Arrow Re: Help!! Newbie!!

    Hello

    If you want to learn C++ ,this is good you start with Borland C++ 4.5 or higher! but Visual Basic.net
    is powerfull program.
    Last edited by Shatel; February 23rd, 2005 at 12:50 AM.

  3. #3

    Re: Help!! Newbie!!

    I'd recommend to start with old fashioned C or C++ (MS VC++ 6.0 or Borland C++ Builder).
    If you once learned that, you can easily change to other languages and the chance to get a really skilled programmer is definately high.

    Perhaps one time you want to program games or other high-performance apps - then you should have a certain knowledge of C++.

    VB is for Beginners and produces really ugly code ;P

  4. #4
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    Re: Help!! Newbie!!

    all depends on what you think.. If you want to learn hard one first go with C++ but the easy one is VB.

    C++ has some mechanics that doesn't exists in other languages ( mostly pointers and shifts operators ). (mostly pointers are now called references but can be used without dereferencing it, while pointers mechanics can get ugly if not properly done. And shifts operators are in fact only * and /)

    if you want to do WINDOWS programming ( meaning with a window, button and all ) don't go C++ way.. Go C# instead or VB.

    There's no Native library for windows programmation in C++.. ( at least not ANSI Standard ones ). So you'll have to learn how to use the NOT so clear MFC or windows API. Might as well go C# instead, way more interesting.

    They might have wrapped a windows programming class around MFC for C++ .Net but if you're gonna program for .NET platform, might as well go with VB or C#.

    anyway it's a matter of taste.. But if you want to do console stuff you can take a look at C++.. But if you want to do windows programming ( button, windows , scroll bars ) might go for c# or vb.

    just my 2 cents
    Last edited by Boumxyz2; February 23rd, 2005 at 03:25 PM.
    Nicolas Bohemier

  5. #5
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    Smile Re: Help!! Newbie!!

    you mean c# is better than c++ to do windows applications??
    then for what exactly is c++???

  6. #6
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    Re: Help!! Newbie!!

    C++ is for everything - windows, games, dos, unix, linux - everything.

    c# is for windows only (maybe games in windows as well, but not sure what the performance would be).

    the reason that Boumxyz2 recommends c# for windows programming is that C++ requires you to do alot of stuff just to do a simple app. check out just a basic "hello world " style -windows- app written in C++ to one written in C# and you will get the idea.

    you got to ask what sort of stuff you want to be doing. if it's games, C/C++ all the way. If you want to learn the basics of programming and aren't sure how you will do (i.e. you have NO experience) then start with VB until you can see that you have the righ head for it and then decide on C/C++ or C# (or Java I guess...). C# is so much easier than C++, and the .Net libraries are really powerful, but if you want to become a real good programmer, then C++ is something you should learn just so you can get grounded in pointers and memory allocation/management and the like.

    And if it is .Net you are looking at, the differences between C# and VB.Net are not so drastic as they all use the same objects - it's just the syntax that differs (at least, at a superficial level, as there are things C# can do that VB can't)

  7. #7
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    Re: Help!! Newbie!!

    Quote Originally Posted by yoyoloco
    then for what exactly is c++???
    and c++ is 20 years old, c# is 5 years old, thats why!

  8. #8
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    Smile Re: Help!! Newbie!!

    thanks!!!!
    you guys really help!!
    you know what i am going to do is that im going to learn c++.net
    why not vb because i just gave a deep look at the sintax and i dont like the vb one i like c++, i think is more logic and i like it more!!
    so wish me luck!
    ha

  9. #9
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    Re: Help!! Newbie!!

    I think you are focusing to much on what is "the better language". There is no such thing. All languages have their positive and negative sides, and thus you need to choose the language that is best suited for what you are trying to do. There is no language that is best for everything. If you need to make simple windows applications quickly and don't require platform independence, use VB/C# .NET or something similar. If you need platform independence, use Java. If you need high performance and limited window handling (like for games), use a compiled language like C/C++. It all depends on what you want to do.

    Oh, and please don't crosspost. This is basically the same thing you asked in the VC++ forum.
    Insert entertaining phrase here

  10. #10
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    Cool Re: Help!! Newbie!!

    well you got me
    but you know i just want to get different opinions
    dont you agree?
    well now i know that you guys check all forums so if i am gona post something im gona do it on ly in one forum
    thanks!!!

  11. #11
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    Re: Help!! Newbie!!

    Quote Originally Posted by yoyoloco
    ... i just gave a deep look at the sintax and i dont like the vb one i like c++, i think is more logic and i like it more!!
    so wish me luck!
    ha
    Well, it's a curious method to decide between languages

    I cannot see any REAL difference in syntax between the two:

    if (condition)
    {
    ...
    }

    if condition then
    ...
    end if

    MyArray[idx1][idx2]...[idxn]
    MyArray(idx1,idx2,...,idxn)
    switch (exp)
    {
    case NUMERIC_CONSTANT // I hate this one
    ...
    }

    select exp
    case exp1, exp2 to exp3, exp4, ... ' I love this one

    for (var=exp1; condition; exp2) // this one is powerfull I've to admit it
    {
    ...
    }

    for var = exp1 to exp2 step exp3
    ...
    next

    int var1, var2;
    dim var1, var2 as integer

    ... calling functions is alike

    Both syntax look alike to me

    pointers uffff they make me sick an array of pointers pointing to an array of pointers pointing to ... my mind gets lost after the second level of derreferencing .... I guess the cases where pointers are really needed can be accounted with one hand fingers.

    Performance? Today's important performance is on coding/maintenance (man time is expensive, machine time is cheap) and the nightmare of "what the f*** h*** was I trying to do with that b*** piece of C code?" is far more expensive than some milliseconds running time.

    One of the bots of The Second International RoShamBo Programming Competition is just one line long:

    Code:
    int henny() { return((*opp_history?opp_history[random()%*opp_history+1]+1:random())%3); }
    but ... what is he doing???? hard to tell

    Well, just kidding ... I use C++ and VB depending on needs, but I don't decide on syntax uglyness.
    Last edited by DeepButi; February 24th, 2005 at 04:25 AM.
    Did it help? rate it.

    The best conversation I had was over forty million years ago ... and that was with a coffee machine.

  12. #12
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    Re: Help!! Newbie!!

    Let me guess hehe I like that

    He's declaring a function that returns a int here

    int henny()

    here's the body of the function

    { return
    (
    (
    *opp_history ? opp_history [ random() % *opp_history + 1 ] +1 : random()
    )
    %
    3
    ) ; }

    Hopefully he declared opp_history somewhere hehehe
    else it doesn't compile.

    let's go with the operators priority
    random first
    returns something that will be casted as an int.. can't know for sure depends on random declaration

    [ random() % *opp_history + 1 ] this will give an int.. (It gets you the array element or the memory case of random() modulo content of pointer opp_history) + 1


    so mainly if the content of opp_history is different from 0 use

    opp_history [ random() % *opp_history + 1 ] +1

    else

    random()

    then return the modulo 3 of this


    FUNNY HOW SYNTAX IN C++ IS LOGIC LOL.
    Nicolas Bohemier

  13. #13
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    Re: Help!! Newbie!!

    Oh an by the way, hehe if you want to do Database programming you might as well learn this :


    RELATIONAL and SETS basics
    and

    SQL Language. hehe C++ is not that great with Databases even though most databases are written in c++

    There's a language for almost every flavor and color of type of programming. So you have to know What you WANNA Do first.

    Just another example is that if you want to do Artificial intelligence, c++ might not be the easiest way to go, because C++ is actually compiled..

    In theory, AI is code that writes code... Or in other way code that is adaptable. And code that writes code mostly means that you need an interpreter..

    And that means no compilation.. Or you need a Gimmicks like JUST IN TIME compilation.

    So perl, Lisp and python are examples of Scripting languages ( needing an interpreter ) ..

    I'm no AI expert but that's the basics I learned. You can prolly find someone with WAY more experience that could disagree with me.

    So the correct question of this thread would be


    What is the best language to learn for "INSERT WHAT YOU WANNA DO HERE".
    Nicolas Bohemier

  14. #14
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    Re: Help!! Newbie!!

    Quote Originally Posted by Boumxyz2
    Hopefully he declared opp_history somewhere hehehe
    else it doesn't compile.
    Yes, he did ...
    Code:
    int my_history[trials+1], opp_history[trials+1];
    The function is embedded in a main program that takes care of the tournament ...

    opp_history[0] is the number of entries in the opponent's moves table
    opp_history[opp_history[0]] is the opponent's last move

    so (I also like that )

    Code:
    If opp_history(0) = 0 Then      ' first move
       Return random() Mod 3                   ' choose a random move
    Else
       Return (opp_history ( random() Mod opp_history(0) + 1 ) + 1 ) Mod 3
                   ' choose a random opponent's move
                   ' and return the move that would have beaten it
    End If
    Nice and elegant.

    Notice the use of *opp_history instead of the equivalent opp_history[0]. Just the kind of things C++ programmers love (and I hate ).

    The real use of C? ... take a look at the famous camel just the beginning of a vaste area: obfuscation.

    Again: just kidding.

    PS. I know, I know ... the camel is not C, it's pearl ... ok, so take a look here, here or here just to begin with ...
    Last edited by DeepButi; February 24th, 2005 at 09:56 AM.
    Did it help? rate it.

    The best conversation I had was over forty million years ago ... and that was with a coffee machine.

  15. #15
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    Exclamation Re: Help!! Newbie!!

    I recommend C++.

    1. Knowing C++ syntax paves way for knowledge of Java, JavaScript, ActionScript 2.0 (ECMAScript 1.4) and C# syntaxes and paradigms (classes, objects, inheritance, incapsulation, interfaces, referencing and more). Knowing VB does neither of the above, except being a "similarity dejavu".

    2. C++ IS NOT a difficult language to learn, it is difficult to use, deploy and debug (maybe), and that only gets easier with time. In fact C++ has one of the most straight forward lexics especially when going into heavy OOP implementations.

    3. You DO NOT need to understand hardware workings in order to use C++, again despite what many perhaps think, because of their legacy knowledge about C which C++ derives from. C++ is fairly abstract, and you can get away without at least knowing what is flat memory adressing, interrupt requests etc. Just take a look at C++.NET (Managed C++), it is half step away from being a C#.

    4. People seem to misunderstand and mix a LANGUAGE and its IMPLEMENTATION. C++ is not microsofts compiler, or GNU or whatever else, it is simply a set of rules which make up a language of communication to a machine. SO basically, there should be not talking about "fast", "portable" etc. C++ compilers get better and faster, and also there exist implementations of C++ facilites which interpret C++ source code rather than compile and link it. So basically, one is left with a rather clean, hardware unobstructed understanding.

    5. OOP is present in physical world, and that is why I think C++ s strong OOP implementation is a better argument against VB's rather loose and amateur implementation (no multiple inheritance).

    The only reason I would recommend VB is rapid application development. If anything else, dont. How many professional VB applications I use ? None. You ? probably zero as well. VB is simply a tool for making money on software. For idealist people, which also have an "academical" interest, and see big future for themselves in software industry, VB can only waste three year of their time if they later suddenly decide to start developing applications for NASA missions or scientific simulation.

    So to sum up the second part of my post: if you are in the business to make quick money on scripting or utility products, go for VB; if you are in it for exploring the limits of logic implementation for a practical task, choose C++ or other language (which I dont dare express myself on at this time)

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