vote up 0 vote down star
1

I am working as a asp and vb developer for the past 4 years (My first job) and I am tired of working with asp and wanted to move to a new technology (Micorosft technologies).

The company I work for is great. Working environment is great and I have a very nice team. I learn and write about .net development in my blogs and participate in forums like stackoverflow to keep me updated.

I was interviewed for a new team in my company and I am moving to sharepoint development. I have absolutely zero knowledge in sharepoint. I know its developed using asp.net. I want a break from asp and do you think its good to start with it? I have also heard about developers hating sharepoint. Why is it so?

Moving from a asp environment what all should I keep in my mind for sharepoint development? Any advices?

flag

2 Answers

vote up 2 vote down check

I was on the same path as you. I started as ASP and then moved to ASP.NET and finally SharePoint programming. I would say that someone with 2831 (on May 20th 2009) points at stackoverflow does not have to worry about ASP.NET. Programming for SharePoint is programming ASP.NET, you only need to learn some additional concepts and stuff.

The best way to get started is to create some pure ASP.NET applications to learn the concepts. There is a conceptual change between ASP and ASP.NET so you should forget the old way and learn .NET object oriented programming. If you will be working for an experienced team ask for a mentor to help you learn.

You should forget ASP it is an obsolete technology.

There are some people that hate SharePoint development but I think you need to stay open minded about it, it is the fastest growing Microsoft product and it will remain strong as corporate application platform.

Check this question for more details on how to learn the stuff.

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

Which Sharepoint version would that be? If it's 2003, you're a bit better off with ASP, but if it's MOSS 2007, you're in for a hard ride, since you will have to get into Asp.net 2.0 first and grasp WebParts afterwards.

Anyway it is, go for it if they tolerate learning team memebers. Staying on ASP is rather completely out of picture for a developer that wants to get somewhere in his career. And MOSS 2007 is a great way to leverage your market value.

link|flag
I am an MCTS (web development) ;-) .net 2.0 . They are aware that I have absolute zero knowldge and they absorbed me only bcoz of my performance. – Shoban May 20 at 8:24
SharePoint 2003 is also based on ASP.NET (1.1) so when it comes to SharePoint ASP is not an option. – Toni Frankola May 20 at 13:27
that was the reason I said he'll be a bit better off, because 1.1 is still less complicated/complex than 2.0. But with SPS2k3/MOSS2k7 it could be debatable... – Robert Koritnik May 21 at 5:56

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.