I'm not trying to start an argument here, but for whatever reason, it's typically stated that Visual Basic is case insensitive and C languages aren't (and somehow that is a good thing).
But here's my question: Where exactly is Visual Basic case insensitive? When I type...
Dim ss As String
Dim SS As String
...into the Visual Studio 2008 or Visual Studio 2010 IDE, the second one has a warning of "Local variable SS
is already declared in the current block". In the VBA VBE, it doesn't immediately kick an error, but rather just auto-corrects the case.
Am I missing something here with this argument that Visual Basic is not case sensitive? (Also, if you know or care to answer, why would that be a bad thing?)
Why am I even asking this question?
I've used Visual Basic in many of its
dialects for years now, sometimes as
a hobbyist, sometimes for small
business-related programs in a
workgroup. As of the last six months,
I've been working on a big project,
much bigger than I anticipated. Much
of the sample source code out there
is in C#. I don't have any burning
desire to learn C#, but if there are
things I'm missing out on that C#
offers that Visual Basic doesn't (an opposite
would be VB.NET offers XML Literals), then I'd like to know
more about that feature. So in this
case, it's often argued that C
languages are case sensitive and
that's good and Visual Basic is case
insensitive and that is bad. I'd
like to know...
- How exactly is Visual Basic
case insensitive since every
single example in the code editor
becomes case sensitive (meaning
the case gets corrected) whether I want
it or not.
- Is this compelling enough for me to
consider moving to C# if VB.NET case
is somehow limiting what I could do
with code?
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