[AccessD] Access to VB.Net

Michael Maddison michael at ddisolutions.com.au
Mon Sep 10 19:19:24 CDT 2007


I like .netTiers a lot.  However it is tied to Codesmith and SQL 2K+,
C#.

I've found C# pretty easy to get the hang of.  VS2005 really makes it
pretty easy to write any
language IMO.  The linking of snippets with intellisense is just great,
class diagrams, easy as...

I had to whip up a quick UI for an Access BE.  Getting the data, data
binding working is a snap
using the builtin controls and data components.  I was surprised just
how quick and easy it was.

cheers

Michael M

I have been with Access since 1.0.

If you are really interested in getting into .Net, I would suggest you
try Codesmith Tools with the .netTiers template for it. Using the
cheapest version of Codesmith, you can create and extremely robust data
layer for your .Net applications. And it takes less than 5 minutes to
regenerate it when you change the database. Once you get accustomed to
using it, it will seem very "Access" like in the resulting classes,
methods, and properties.

If you go into VB.net, then the learning curve is not very bad. C# is a
bit steeper. I am doing both.

Web forms is another world. WinForms (Smart Client) will look pretty
familiar. Learning curve is much steeper on the Web Forms.

Robert


At 04:08 PM 9/10/2007, you wrote:
>Date: Mon, 10 Sep 2007 14:25:58 -0500
>From: "Dan Waters" <dwaters at usinternet.com>
>Subject: Re: [AccessD] Access to VB.Net
>To: "'Access Developers discussion and problem solving'"
>         <accessd at databaseadvisors.com>
>Message-ID: <002001c7f3e0$6add9980$0200a8c0 at danwaters>
>Content-Type: text/plain;       charset="us-ascii"
>
>Well, I am certainly curious to learn something new.  Perhaps for the 
>first time I'll take a class to get started!
>
>Thanks,
>Dan


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