show/hide this revision's text 3 added correction to influences behind C#

There is a theory I once heard that the .NET programmer is the American tourist of programmers. Meaning that there is a perception in the market that the .NET programmer does not care about solutions that did not come from Microsoft. That if a solution is not the official M$ way, then it isn't any good. I know personally many devs that work in .NET who struggle to see the light beyond datatables and sql queries. Sure these are good solutions in some places but in other places an ORM framework or other tool that might come from the community may be a better fit...

But while the American Tourist idea of a .NET programmer might fit some individuals it certainly doesn't speak for everyone. What is now being called 'Alt.NET' is full of fresh ideas and innovations that are not directly from m$. I think you should like C#, it is a very good application language. In the past it was influenced by Java a mix of Helsberg's experiences with Delphi and Java but going forward I think you can see with Java 7, some influence from C# on Java.

I don't like the stereotyping and name calling that is so common place. I think if your dedicated to learning and furthering the craft of being a software professional the tools are less important. That is to say if my favorite language is groovy and your favorite language is C#, our similarities are much greater than our differences overall. Unfortunately, this kind of 'let's all sing kumbaya' thinking does not describe the reality of social sites.

I'm not sure how to address the negative mindset that is so pervasive across such sites, but I can definitely say that if your talented, dedicated to learning and the craft of building great software then that is all that should really matter in the free exchange of thoughts and ideas about software.

show/hide this revision's text 2 Fix a couple of typos; break it up into smaller paragraphs for readability

There is a theory I once heard that the .NET programmer is the american American tourist of programmers. Meaning that there is a perception in the market that the .NET programmer does not care about solutions that did not come from Microsoft. That if a solution is not the official M$ way, then it isn't any good. I know personally many devs that work in .NET who struggle to see the light beyond datatables and sql queries. Sure these are good solutions in some places but in other places an ORM framework or other tool that might come from the community may be a better fit...

But while the American Tourist idea of a .NET programmer might fit some inidividuals individuals it certainly doesn't speak for everyone. What is now being called 'Alt.NET' is full of fresh ideas and innovations that are not directly from m$. I think you should like C#, it is a very good application language. In the past it was influenced by Java and going forward I think you can see with Java 7, some influence from C# on Java.

I don't like the stereotyping and name calling that is so common place. I think if your dedicated to learning and furthering the craft of being a software professional the tools are less important. That is to say if my favorite language is groovy and your favorite language is C#, our similarities are much greater than our differences overall. Unfortunately, this kind of 'let's all sing kumbaya' thinking does not describe the reality of social sites.

I'm not sure how to address the negative mindset that is so pervasive across such sites, but I can definetly definitely say that if your talented, dedicated to learning and the craft of building great software then that is all that should really matter in the free exchange of thoughts and ideas about software.

show/hide this revision's text 1

There is a theory I once heard that the .NET programmer is the american tourist of programmers. Meaning that there is a perception in the market that the .NET programmer does not care about solutions that did not come from Microsoft. That if a solution is not the official M$ way, then it isn't any good. I know personally many devs that work in .NET who struggle to see the light beyond datatables and sql queries. Sure these are good solutions in some places but in other places an ORM framework or other tool that might come from the community may be a better fit... But while the American Tourist idea of a .NET programmer might fit some inidividuals it certainly doesn't speak for everyone. What is now being called 'Alt.NET' is full of fresh ideas and innovations that are not directly from m$. I think you should like C#, it is a very good application language. In the past it was influenced by Java and going forward I think you can see with Java 7, some influence from C# on Java. I don't like the stereotyping and name calling that is so common place. I think if your dedicated to learning and furthering the craft of being a software professional the tools are less important. That is to say if my favorite language is groovy and your favorite language is C#, our similarities are much greater than our differences overall. Unfortunately, this kind of 'let's all sing kumbaya' thinking does not describe the reality of social sites. I'm not sure how to address the negative mindset that is so pervasive across such sites, but I can definetly say that if your talented, dedicated to learning and the craft of building great software then that is all that should really matter in the free exchange of thoughts and ideas about software.

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