Originally posted by: Schadenfroh
whats wrong with C++ that you want to replace it,
schadenfroh<--- has not steped outside the realm of visiual basic
Originally posted by: tweakmm
You didn't get the new memo? It's 2040 now.Originally posted by: dighn
2050
Originally posted by: cashman
Originally posted by: tweakmm
You didn't get the new memo? It's 2040 now.Originally posted by: dighn
2050
Yea, that TPS report.
Originally posted by: OREOSpeedwagon
Originally posted by: cashman
Originally posted by: tweakmm
You didn't get the new memo? It's 2040 now.Originally posted by: dighn
2050
Yea, that TPS report.
damnit where is my stapler
Originally posted by: iloveme2
Originally posted by: OREOSpeedwagon
Originally posted by: cashman
Originally posted by: tweakmm
You didn't get the new memo? It's 2040 now.Originally posted by: dighn
2050
Yea, that TPS report.
damnit where is my stapler
i could set the building on fire
Originally posted by: cashman
Originally posted by: tweakmm
You didn't get the new memo? It's 2040 now.Originally posted by: dighn
2050
Yea, that TPS report.
Originally posted by: Glitchny
and it damn well bettwe cause i dont want to have to go back through school
Originally posted by: TerryMathews
Originally posted by: Glitchny
and it damn well bettwe cause i dont want to have to go back through school
Java's close enough that if you are far enough along to utilize classes, nodes, and templates you can just pretty much start writing java as though it were C++ and go by the compiler errors to figure out the nuances. Been there, done that, got the T-shirt.
IMO, C++ will never die. It'll be upgraded, but that's what makes it a great language. If anything replaces it, Java will. The Virtual Machine concept may take off if anyone ever integrates a 3d video aspect in it that passes through D3d or OpenGL to the host machine. Imagine, cross-platform games. No more developers not supporting Linux.
Dare to dream.