T technique for programming vs2008 is entirely different from vb6 since it is entirely object-oriented. Stick with your book, since it will probably deal with this technique. Whilst it is possible to program procedurally in VB6, it isn't the way it is done. I hope you'll soon be writing your first application. ----- Original Message ----- From: Steve Spamer To: program-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Sent: Saturday, March 07, 2009 7:20 PM Subject: [program-l] Re: DirectX, VB 6 and VBS 2008? Hi David, thanks a lot and at least that's cleared a few things up for me. I will, of course, continue my basic training so to speak, but I do like to look at sample code and just go over it to get a handle on what's going on. 1 thing I'm definatly learning from this book, is that there's more than 1 way to achieve the same thing, it's a very creative process and it all depends on the developer. I guess source code from VB 6 projects are a no go at the moment, which is a shame, as I'm pretty sure the book I'm going through doesn't touch on audio at all. Thanks once again, the mission continues! Cheers Steve. ----- Original Message ----- From: David Lant To: program-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Sent: Saturday, March 07, 2009 3:54 PM Subject: [program-l] Re: DirectX, VB 6 and VBS 2008? Hi Steve, Largely the process will be much the same. However, there are going to be syntactical differences as you've discovered from the upgrade wizard. Be aware that what you get out of the upgrade wizard won't necessarily be right or work. All the wizard will do is try to convert one syntax to the other. Sometimes it will warn you that things won't behave the same or that certain VB6 features are no longer supported. Another thing to bear in mind is that there are versions of DirectX which are supported by .NET but not VB6. So what you're looking at will be old versions of DirectX by definition. My personal recommendation would be to get really comfortable with VB.Net first, and then start reading up on DirectX when you're sufficiently confident to write code for your own requirements rather than just working through examples. DirectX is not trivial, although sticking to the audio aspects does simplify things a little bit. It is also worth bearing in mind that generally most DirectX programming is not done with VB, but with the C languages. You'll find comparatively sparse support and documentation for working with DirectX and VB compared to C# and C++. It can be done, but it's a bit of a lonely path at times. Just ask people like Justin and a few others on this list who have been around audio games writing for a few years. <smile> All the best, David From: program-l-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:program-l-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Steve Spamer Sent: 07 March 2009 14:15 To: program-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: [program-l] DirectX, VB 6 and VBS 2008? Hi list. I'm continueing down my path of learning VB and I'm finding things not too bad doing the exercises in the book. As I want to eventually program audio games, I came across a tutorial to set up directX and to run through a very basic example of creating and playing a sound with parameters. The problem is that this was written in VB 6 and I'm using VBS 2008. My question is, is there enough of a difference in these 2 IDE's and the code to make it difficult to follow and run this tutorials code? I've opened the source code to a game there: BTW it's on the BSC games site, and looking through it, after upgrading it through the wizard in VBS 2008, it's quite a bit different from the code in the tutorial! Is the approach in making audio like this in VBS 2008 totally different to previous versions? Sorry if this has been a basic no brainer question, but I'm trying to figure out at what level and from where I can gain the correct information to achieve what I want to achieve using VBS 2008. Many thanks Steve. Visit my site for everything from gifts, ringtones, screensavers, automatically updating RSS news stories and quiz's to conspiracy theories, music, videos,the charts from 1956-2008 and amazing facts + so much more! Contact me: Skype: steve-chase MSN: stevesax68@xxxxxxxxxxx E-Mail: steve@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Mobile: 077333 73714 __________ Information from ESET Smart Security, version of virus signature database 3917 (20090307) __________ The message was checked by ESET Smart Security. http://www.eset.com