No such case sensitivity option in the IDE. To see some really good flame
wars, check out the VB.NET and C# groups on the MS server. Hee heee
heeee.....
"Chris Pettingill" <> wrote in message
news:...
> I was kind of suprised to see the case-sensitivity in C#, and would have
> expected this to have been left behind. I can't think of a good reason to
> allow this. I'm just getting familiar with the VS.NET IDE, but I'm hoping
> there's an option in the IDE that will give me comiler warnings (or
> something similar) if I try to use the same identifier name with different
> captilization in my code. Intellisense will help somewhat, but I'd like
the
> option to enforce this more strictly.
>
> "Leigh Kendall" <> wrote in message
> news:%...
> > I don't disagree; with the ease of learning curve in VB, the moron
> > floodgates did open. I know one too many myself...
> >
> > I don't know, the wordiness mainly comes from closing tags and a more
> > descriptive, verbose language. Some like myself don't mind it, others
do.
> On
> > the other hand, I really don't mind C#'s case sensitivity, curly braces,
> > semi-colons and terseness; others I know shutter at it. Whatever floats
> your
> > boat, and better yet, pays the bills!
> >
> > "General Protection Fault" <>
wrote
> > in message news:...
> > > Leigh Kendall wrote:
> > >
> > > >>If you learn C# first, VB.NET might be tough because you'll have to
> > > >>learn to think like a moron to program in VB.NET.
> > > >
> > > >
> > > >
> > > > Are you an insecure C bigot or an ex-VB'er with an inferiority
> complex?
> > >
> > > Microsoft made the programming entry barrier so low with VB6 that any
> > > moron could and did start programming.
> > >
> > > As well, "On Error Goto" was a slap in Dijkstra's face. The language
> > > itself encouraged improper and haphazard programming. VB.NET may be a
> > > new language but still too wordy.
> > >
> >
>
>
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