Re: programming in .net
- From: Jared Wright <wright.jaredm@xxxxxxxxx>
- To: programmingblind@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
- Date: Tue, 19 Jan 2010 21:10:37 -0500
VS has some cool features for sure. But the troubles I've run into when
trying to get work done offset the nice features. In the end it's about
how fast I can get something done. I don't get Intelesense when working
in other environments, so I can cope.
Jared
On 1/19/2010 3:49 PM, Ken Perry wrote:
You are missing out if you use text editors over visual studio
intelesense alone is enough to make you go to vs if your coding in .net.
Ken
*From:* programmingblind-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:programmingblind-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] *On Behalf Of *Jared Wright
*Sent:* Tuesday, January 19, 2010 9:42 AM
*To:* programmingblind@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
*Subject:* Re: programming in .net
I'm taking a course that uses .net as its environment right now. I
haven't found anything I can't do, but I use text editors still more
than Visual Studio. Jamal Mazrui sent me the following two links when
I asked him about this over my school's break, and I've found them to
be very useful. The first is an archive of C# reference/learning
material, since it is what I feel more comfortable with syntactically.
It can be found at http://EmpowermentZone.com/cnetdoc.zip
I believe there is also a collection related to vb.net, but I haven't
looked at it much. You'll also want to look at the Homer collection of
tools Jamal pointed me to, as they are very useful for helping to
create GUI interfaces and do some of the other tasks that are more
typically accomplished with the IDE. I've only cherry-picked at these
a bit, but there appears to be a lot of useful routines contained
within them.
http://EmpowermentZone.com/hnsetup.zip
IN closing, I think I'll be fine with .net now, because I've been
programming regularly now for a few years. I don't know if I'd
recommend a blind person start learning using one of the .net
environments. There's just too much going on in cutting VS out of the
equasion, and most of your beginner's tutorials and the like presume
extensive use of Visual Studio. I don't think any of the accessibility
solutions for VS at this point really let you think about VS more than
how to make the screen reader read the IDE properly. I know some
disagree with me on this and part of that conclusion has been brought
about by the blind community as a whole's testimonials on VS more than
my own direct experimentation, so perhaps someone can give you an
opposing prospective. But if you already have a grasp on the OO
paradigm, there's lots of evidence to its being a more than workable
environment without needing to involve VS much, which is the big
accessibility hurdle.
HTH,
Jared
On 1/19/2010 9:22 AM, Robert J Smith wrote:
Hi all. I may have sent this question a couple years ago but my
supervisor has asked me to check again. I need to know if there are
any applications programmers who are programming in the .net
environment in visual basic, asp, and c# with speech software. If so,
have you been able to successfully develop both form and report
programs? Are there any limitations (meaning things that can't be
done) using screen reading speech software?
Thank you in advance.
Robert Smith
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