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Maybe a strange and green question, but

Is there anything C# can't do what javascript can... And considering JQuery?

except for the fact that one is clientside, and the other serverside? Or am I asking a very stupid question now?

EDIT: to be more specific: I mean web programming, and indeed maybe a more useful question is:

> What can I do client side that I can't do server side, and vice versa?

> Are there more reasons to use both languages if you keep "server/clientside" out of scope?

> some developers avoid javascript. why?

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    You can write (I assume) client side C# via Silverlight (if you make people install a plugin, eugh) and JS is quite happy to run server side ( en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Server-side_JavaScript ). "What can I do client side that I can't do server side, and vice versa?" is a completely different question to C# Vs. JavaScript. You should probably edit the question to clarify.
    – Quentin
    May 27, 2010 at 13:18
  • It'd help if you provided more context; how will knowing the answer to the question help you out? What project are you contemplating?
    – Pointy
    May 27, 2010 at 13:19

5 Answers 5

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What can I do client side that I can't do server side, and vice versa?

Client-side: Javascript runs in most browsers without a plugin. C# requires a browser plugin like Silverlight. Even though it's running on a client machine, Javascript can't read and write files there. C# in Silverlight may be able to read and write files depending on the Silverlight version and what the client allows. Both Javascript and C#/Silverlight can talk to remote servers.

Server-side: since you control this machine, you can do whatever you want - read files, write files, talk directly to databases, etc. Keep in mind there's nothing stopping you from running Javascript server-side. Check out node.js.

Are there more reasons to use both languages if you keep "server/clientside" out of scope?

I wouldn't leave the execution environment out of your analysis. If you absolutely need client-side interaction and can't guarantee C# will execute on the client, C# isn't practical. Likewise, if your company runs Windows servers and doesn't want to install Javascript runtimes/compilers, you won't be able to use Javascript on the server.

some developers avoid javascript. why?

Problems with Javascript in a browser are absolutely awful to debug. You're running on a machine that's out of your control - the user may be running an obscure or ancient browser, they may be using anti-virus software that mucks with your Javascript, their browser plugins might muck with your Javascript. It's hard.

This is the cost of doing business on someone else's machine, however. If it was easy, a beautiful client-side experience would mean less. Solving hard problems isn't for everyone but it sure is appreciated when it's done well.

13

I take it your real question is, if c# can do everything, why should you use javascript at all? The answer here is performance, both perceived and real. The trick here is that to use c# to do the DOM manipulation normally associated with javascript, a browser has to post back an extra http request to the server and tell the c# code what to do. Lets talk about those extra requests. Spread around a lot of users, they add up very quickly and play havoc on your server infrastructure. The "real" performance issue is that now a lot of work has to happen on your server(s), instead of in your users' browsers. The "perceived" performance issues is that, even if you have the server resources to easily handle all the additional http requests, you user now has to spend extra time waiting for latency incurred by those http round trips.

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    I would add to this that putting strictly "view" code in your browser makes your server-side code cleaner and easier to read. May 27, 2010 at 14:49
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Both languages rely heavily on API's that were designed for different domains.

JavaScript was originally intended to run inside of a browser, so it makes heavy use of DOM API's as well as other in-browser operations such as AJAX. C# probably does not have good support for such API's as it was never intended to be executed directly inside a browser - although Silverlight may provide such operations since it is (in a way) a "C# Sandbox" inside of a browser.

On the other hand, C# is a general-purpose language that was designed to build basically any application, from server-side engines to client applications to services - you get the idea...

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I have seen a C# project where javascript is embedded and can execute javascript within a C# code. Have a look here on CodeProject to see how that is achieved.

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Technically, no.

You could even use Javascript server-side if you wanted (or client-side C# via different mechanisms).

They're really just two ways of getting the same job done.

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  • when people are speaking about C# they usually really mean C# + BCL, but out-of-the-box javascript's library is poor.
    – Andrey
    May 27, 2010 at 13:21
  • 1
    @Andry Javascript's out of the box functionality might be a little weak, but it's so easy to extend and re-use your code that it really doesn't matter. Either way, you can still get the job done. May 27, 2010 at 13:23
  • I think the most popular server side solution out there is node.js. It is not part of the Azure platform. windowsazure.com/en-us/develop/nodejs Jan 19, 2012 at 11:05

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