Why everyone ended up using VS? Weren't there any other alternatives in the first place?
I worked for a company that produced and sold engineering software.
The tech departments are basically told to repackage the same program each year and release a brand new version for marketing purposes and to seem "relevant".
All the engineers would always beg for them to fix the bugs and add a few tweaks. Like one good program that did all would easily last ten years for a lot of these guys designing.
Instead they would get too caught up in "latest trends" like the cloud-based access they also made a big fuss about when none of their users asked for it. Lol.
I don't understand how companies don't understand that people don't like change. Create one SOLID program and let users master and have fun on it for years to come. We don't want new shit where everything is different every 1-2 years.
All your code are belongs to us.
I've been using code for a while anyway. VS sucks, too much automation and idiot buttons so people dont have to think.
Yeah evrything is CLI based now anyways so most of the value adds of Visual Studio: Nigger edition are moot. That thin acts like a nigger too
A programmer complaining about automation... I can only imagine what kind of shit programs you write there, buddy. "gotta make the user think about what they're doing". Brilliant. Yeah so good programmers like automation so they have time to focus on actual issues not shit busy work. Code scaffolding saves literal days of work on even small projects.
Yeah busy work like understanding what a csproj file is and what it does and how to use one. Go back to the front end noob. Back to writing shit that breaks all the time because you don't actually understand how any of it works. Let me tell you something tard. Physically writing out the code is the smallest time effort of any project. Thinking about what the code is supposed to do and how to make it achieve that is 90%.
God, imagine thinking knowing what's in a project file is a big thing. You're beclowning yourself. Come back when you know the diffence between the heap and the stack, wannabie
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