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Silverlight w/C# clientside. I'm excited by the idea of replacing javascript. I'm still happy to use java backend, I love tomcat.


Please explain why you're excited about being able to use C# instead of Javascript. Personally, if I had to use C# for anything, I'd be very excited by the prospect of replacing it with Javascript.


Desktop UI, Enterprise Systems, Large-scale software. Would you rather write your web-app using Javascript that (hopefully) able to connect to a DB?


Javascript doesn't imply that it has to be client side.


I would rather work with a more robust and defined language. Certainly having hacked dHtml for so long, javascript has grown a place in our hearts. I have not used it yet, so maybe I won't be impressed with how it works clientside. It's still new to me.


"Robust" seems to me to be a bit of a weasel word - a term that can mean whatever you want it to. What do you mean by "robust"?

Defined is a more meaningful word. I believe both languages have specs that clearly define how the language should behave. I suspect what you mean here is that when doing client-side programming, you'd prefer to only have to worry about one implementation instead of the 4-5 Javascript interpreters we currently need to worry about.


"Rigid" - In the sense that from a readability, reuseability and a more structured manner; C# requires you to maintain a more firm structure and more defined variable declaration. These things from a growing, hacking company hold a huge value to us. I of course just envision this and could be full of crap. But the purpose was what technologies where you excited to try. Could you tell me why C# wouldn't be a better fit than js? Seems to me you might enlighten the community more giving us information than trying to give us lessons on how to answer an open ended question. I apologize if I was weaseling, I'm just excited to try it, I'm not a clientside c# expert. Of course the portability from interpetors is huge too, but that is actually less why I'm excited to try it. That is just a given more.


So "robust" = "rigid"?

I asked you to explain yourself because you were expressing a belief - that a statically typed language that uses a lot of boilerplate and doesn't have first class functions is preferable to a dynamically typed language that doesn't require a lot of boilerplate and does have first class language - that is believed to be false by most members of this community. You are, of course free to get excited over anything you want, but expect to be challenged if you make meaningless claims about your favorite technologies.




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