Visual Basic
C++
D (Programming Language)
F#
Perl
Pike programming language
Crystal (programming language)
IronPython
Go Programming Language
C++
Python
Crystal (programming language)
Nim (programming language)
Java
Perl
D (Programming Language)
Visual Basic
Go Programming LanguageBased on our record, Go Programming Language seems to be a lot more popular than Visual Basic. While we know about 345 links to Go Programming Language, we've tracked only 5 mentions of Visual Basic. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
Yes. It's called the documentation. Source: over 3 years ago
The Microsoft documentation is probably going to be the best bet for VB.NET. Source: over 4 years ago
And for that one, I had a friend who worked at the computer place who had Visual Basic, and I was like, "Give me the Visual Basic disc." And so I loaded that onto my computer and just made a CV as a program in Visual Basic, put it on a floppy disk, and then dropped it in the letterbox of this guy who was in his garage. He had a small business, and he needed an extra programmer. And that's how I started my first... - Source: dev.to / over 4 years ago
How about this by Microsoft? https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/visual-basic/. Source: about 5 years ago
Are you referring to the .NET version of Visual Basic here or the classic Visual Basic 6 which pre-dates .NET by quite a bit and whose extended support ended in 2008? Source: about 5 years ago
With the Dockerfile support, you can deploy any stack on it: GO, Rails, Spring Boot, Laravel, etc. And it's very easy to deploy as well, and it has the same experience as deploying a frontend application. Will see in this blog by creating a simple Golang server and deploying to Vercel. - Source: dev.to / 13 days ago
Go is an open-source, statically typed, compiled language designed at Google for simplicity, reliability, and efficiency. It ships with a rich standard library, first-class concurrency primitives (goroutines and channels), and produces single, statically-linked binaries โ making it an excellent fit for microservices and containerised workloads. - Source: dev.to / about 1 month ago
Unlike Go where the language definition itself via its compiler strictly enforces the inclusion of modules (i.e., include exactly what you use, no more, no less), neither the C nor C++ language definitions have an equivalent enforcement. This can lead to two problems:. - Source: dev.to / 2 months ago
The difference was the language. OpenCode is written in Go. Aider is Python, Cline is TypeScript running in the VS Code extension host. For a tool that spends its time reading files, parsing diffs, and piping text to an LLM, Go's concurrency primitives and fast startup matter more than they should. OpenCode opens the repo, loads a file tree, and is ready to accept a prompt in under 150ms. Cline, running inside VS... - Source: dev.to / 3 months ago
I measured gateway overhead (not LLM response time) using a standardised Go benchmarking harness:. - Source: dev.to / 3 months ago
C++ - Has imperative, object-oriented and generic programming features, while also providing the facilities for low level memory manipulation
D (Programming Language) - D is a language with C-like syntax and static typing.
Python - Python is a clear and powerful object-oriented programming language, comparable to Perl, Ruby, Scheme, or Java.
F# - F# is a mature, open source, cross-platform, functional-first programming language.
Crystal (programming language) - Programming language with Ruby-like syntax that compiles to efficient native code.
Perl - Highly capable, feature-rich programming language with over 26 years of development