• @jyte@lemmy.world
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    74 months ago

    Also I’ve read that C# is C++++ (like put those + on 2x2 table, which in turns ressemble a #)

    • @danA
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      54 months ago

      Hahaha I’ve never heard that before. Seems legit.

      C# was originally “Java: The Good Parts” but but these days it’s a much more advanced language and runtime compared to Java.

      • @Zangoose@lemmy.one
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        14 months ago

        As a dev who works on both Java and C# code, modern Java (17+) and C# feel almost exactly the same (not sure if Java has extension methods though).

        Bonus points for using Kotlin instead tho. I dislike both Java and C# just because they both allow any object to be null and that’s usually a headache whenever a null exception shows up.

        The only thing I like better about C# is the Fixture library for testing. I haven’t found any mature libraries like it for Java yet.

        • @danA
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          24 months ago

          they both allow any object to be null and that’s usually a headache whenever a null exception shows up.

          C# has nullable reference types now: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/csharp/nullable-references. If you enable it, you have to explicitly make reference types nullable (like ?string) and you’ll get build warnings if you try to use a variable that’s potentially null.