this post was submitted on 05 Jul 2023
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Programming
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First, of course, use whatever you're comfortable with.
Second, a lot of that advice you see is about long-term development on large projects. Often you don't know if a little side project is going to turn into something huge but it'd be nice to have started it in something that will be more easily maintainable down the line.
May I just ask how VB.NET code isn't maintainable? Not attacking you here, just out of curiosity. My board game server and client together amount to multiple thousand lines of code, as they're very feature rich and at the moment, it's not really hard for me to maintain things. It's not public yet, though. Still active development phase.
I was mostly thinking about PHP with that comment. Which has some serious issues with how modules from other files are included and general structure. It's possible to write well organized PHP projects but it takes discipline, it doesn't happen organically, and its really hard to fix once the project has grown significantly.
I haven't used VB since
VB.NET
2003 so I hesitate to speak on that directly. Professionally I work across multiple OS's and architectures so all .NET languages are kinda no-go's. That's where C++ really shines..NET has had support for Linux, Mac and ARM for a while now.