Comment by kragen

2 years ago

i'm struggling under the misconception that having things flex properly as the window sizes is the default in html and basically impossible in vb6. but i'm very open to having my misconceptions corrected. is there a public video that demonstrates what it looks like when an expert uses vb6, so i can see what things that are hard in html are easy in vb6?

i have no idea what segment, revenuecat, mixpanel, datadog, sentry, etc., are

The point everyone is making is that you could have modernized the VB6/Lazarus approach to meet modern needs and it would have been much more productive than what we have currently with html+css.

And indeed, many of the complaints people have about VB6 not supporting multiple resolutions, etc, are fixed in Lazarus.

  • it's possible that the people i was talking to meant that, but i took them to mean something much stronger, that there are things that were easy and fluent in vb6 that are clumsy in dhtml. and i'd like to know what those things were, but text is not a good medium for that

    christine lavin wrote a song about your interpretation https://mojim.com/usy144575x1x8.htm in which she says

        The reality of me
        cannot compete
        with the dreams you have of her.
        And the love you've given me
        is not as sweet
        as the feelings that she stirs.
        And so you turn away
        and you say that you're sorry,
        But you must pursue this dream,
        this improbable dream.
        Though things have not been bad,
        you can't say you've had
        Quite as good a time as it first seemed.
    

    some software that could have been written is always better than all software that has actually been written

    • The conversation often goes like this.

      creating UI's in VB6 was so much faster and easier than html+css

      yeah, but they're not reactive to resolution changes.

      me: but they could have been updated rather than throwing them away and going with the complexity of today's solution.

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