jwcolby
jwcolby at colbyconsulting.com
Fri Jun 1 10:41:41 CDT 2007
ROTFL. Shut the heck up Charlotte, you are scaring people off. Seriously though, there is a degree of that. However .Net is incredibly easy to use once you get comfortable with the IDE. I find myself spending my time googling for code, which once I see it and use it cements another piece into my repertoire. And it truly is an order of magnitude faster for many things. If the bottleneck is the CODE SPEED, then .Net will give you a huge speed boost. If the bottleneck is data access then certainly less so. John W. Colby Colby Consulting www.ColbyConsulting.com -----Original Message----- From: accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com [mailto:accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com] On Behalf Of Charlotte Foust Sent: Friday, June 01, 2007 10:57 AM To: Access Developers discussion and problem solving Subject: Re: [AccessD] FW: Removing quotes However, the .Net learning curve took months!! LOL Charlotte -----Original Message----- From: accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com [mailto:accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com] On Behalf Of jwcolby Sent: Friday, June 01, 2007 7:40 AM To: 'Access Developers discussion and problem solving' Subject: Re: [AccessD] FW: Removing quotes Rocky, If speed is a real concern, switch to vb.net. You will get about a 10X improvement in speed. I am dealing with 10s of millions of records with > 100 fields and the switch dropped my processing from days to hours.