I think its what you enjoy. I prefer working with c# over javascript. However I always program with a smile when working with ruby and rails even though I spend most of my time with C#.
I much prefer statically typed programming languages over dynamically typed programming languages, and in my opinion C# is the best one! :) Working with C# in Visual Studio for me is the most enjoyable programming experience.
@@GavinLon Sir can do Large Scale Application developed with Blazor, C#, and .NET ASP .NET Core Sir...Because when y order developers guys talk.....What they Mention is JavaScript, Next.JS, NodeJS and Java... Is there Current Ecommerce Aside Nopecommerce using .NET
@olanrewajusaka3991 I think ASP.NET Core is a great framework for developing enterprise level e-commerce applications. :) I think I'd prefer ASP.NET Core in large part because of its cohesive ecosystem and ease of integration of security like OAuth2.
@RockNRollah I work with both. For large scale .NET projects I prefer to use Visual Studio on Windows. I do at times develop using Visual Studio Code on MacOS,
I grew up in South Africa - so I think that is where the perceived Dutch inflection comes from :) I spent most of my adult life working in London, England.
Node.JS is used for server-side programming, and primarily deployed for non-blocking, event-driven servers, such as traditional web sites and back-end API services. So Node.JS, although as you say is a runtime - it can and is commonly used so that developers can create server side web functionality (using JavaScript (or TypeScript)) in a similar way that ASP.NET core can be used for creating server-side web functionality. The video is certainly not intended as a comprehensive deep dive comparison (I may do something like that in the future) - but hopefully gives viewers a very general understanding of the two technologies and how they differ in a particular context (server-side web development functionality (websites, web api, micro services etc..)).
Yes, sure, it is used on the server, no doubt. But I would have liked to see a little clarification that Node.js itself doesn't serve anything out of the box. Maybe mentioning Express.js as the de-facto standard server would've helped. The video might be a little bit misleading for newcomers. Nevertheless, thanks for your effort 😀
@AshrafTarek - its a fair criticism and something that I wrestled with a bit before I created the video :) These videos are fairly short videos so its not possible to go into a lot of detail but the points you make are of course valid. I think this is why the comments section is so important where the details can be discussed further. I would push back a bit on it could be a bit misleading to newbies. A newbie isn't going to watch a 10 minute video like this expecting to learn details about Node.Js (I think it's clear that this isn't a video for newbies to learn the details of Node.JS). When I create detailed tutorials or courses I'm very thorough with my research and make sure that I cover the important details. These videos are just intended to be basic overview comparison videos. Having said that - I'm glad you mentioned Express.js in your comment. :)
I think its what you enjoy. I prefer working with c# over javascript. However I always program with a smile when working with ruby and rails even though I spend most of my time with C#.
I much prefer statically typed programming languages over dynamically typed programming languages, and in my opinion C# is the best one! :) Working with C# in Visual Studio for me is the most enjoyable programming experience.
@@GavinLon Sir can do Large Scale Application developed with Blazor, C#, and .NET ASP .NET Core Sir...Because when y order developers guys talk.....What they Mention is JavaScript, Next.JS, NodeJS and Java... Is there Current Ecommerce Aside Nopecommerce using .NET
@olanrewajusaka3991 I think ASP.NET Core is a great framework for developing enterprise level e-commerce applications. :) I think I'd prefer ASP.NET Core in large part because of its cohesive ecosystem and ease of integration of security like OAuth2.
@@GavinLon You work with Windows or macOS ?
@RockNRollah I work with both. For large scale .NET projects I prefer to use Visual Studio on Windows. I do at times develop using Visual Studio Code on MacOS,
.NET. Perf, Strong types, Better dev tools
I totally agree :)
Try Deno + TS
The bloopers were great 😂😂
lol - recording these videos is, unfortunately, never a 100% smooth process. Glad you enjoyed the bloopers :)
Hi. I couldn't place your accent but I do enjoy it. Is it Dutch?
I grew up in South Africa - so I think that is where the perceived Dutch inflection comes from :) I spent most of my adult life working in London, England.
@@GavinLon Cool. I like your content, especially C# related content. Keep up the good work.
@@denzelbuka1019 Thank you! More content is coming soon :)
I don't get why you would compare a .NET web framework with a JavaScript runtime 🤔
Node.JS is used for server-side programming, and primarily deployed for non-blocking, event-driven servers, such as traditional web sites and back-end API services. So Node.JS, although as you say is a runtime - it can and is commonly used so that developers can create server side web functionality (using JavaScript (or TypeScript)) in a similar way that ASP.NET core can be used for creating server-side web functionality. The video is certainly not intended as a comprehensive deep dive comparison (I may do something like that in the future) - but hopefully gives viewers a very general understanding of the two technologies and how they differ in a particular context (server-side web development functionality (websites, web api, micro services etc..)).
Yes, sure, it is used on the server, no doubt.
But I would have liked to see a little clarification that Node.js itself doesn't serve anything out of the box. Maybe mentioning Express.js as the de-facto standard server would've helped. The video might be a little bit misleading for newcomers.
Nevertheless, thanks for your effort 😀
@AshrafTarek - its a fair criticism and something that I wrestled with a bit before I created the video :) These videos are fairly short videos so its not possible to go into a lot of detail but the points you make are of course valid. I think this is why the comments section is so important where the details can be discussed further. I would push back a bit on it could be a bit misleading to newbies. A newbie isn't going to watch a 10 minute video like this expecting to learn details about Node.Js (I think it's clear that this isn't a video for newbies to learn the details of Node.JS). When I create detailed tutorials or courses I'm very thorough with my research and make sure that I cover the important details. These videos are just intended to be basic overview comparison videos. Having said that - I'm glad you mentioned Express.js in your comment. :)
No doubt
Yes it is and I won't discuss it.
Oh Yeah!
Objectively yes
I agree :)