In VB6, as in most "ancient" programming languages, there was the maxim "There can be only one!" (see the movie "Highlander"). You could have only one Function or Sub with the same name in a module or in a class. In VB.NET as in C# you can have several methods having the same name, as long as they have different signatures. This means that they need to have a different number of parameters or differnt types of parameters. These function are then said to be overloaded. In VB you can add the optional keyword Overloads
to such Functions or Subs.
Public Sub Test(s As String)
Public Sub Test(i As Integer)
Public Sub Test(s As String, i As Integer)
This would be OK. However
Public Sub Test(t As String)
would not, since there exists already a overloaded method with one string parameter. Different parameter names are not sufficient.