Re: VC++ .net 2005 express beta 2
- From: "Carl Daniel [VC++ MVP]" <cpdaniel_remove_this_and_nospam@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Fri, 5 Aug 2005 06:34:49 -0700
Peted wrote:
> Hi, sorry if this isnt the correct newsgroups for this questions but
>
> im using vc++ 2005 express edition beta2 for learning to program vc++
> .net, as in winforms applications and i was wondering if
>
> can anyone point me to some sample code for writing to connect to a
> existing telnet server
>
> I just want to be able to establish a connection, send character info
> and retreive the result sent back as a result of what i send.
>
> Any advice appreciated
http://www.dotnet247.com/247reference/a.aspx?u=http://www.csharphelp.com/archives/archive239.html
has a simple telnet client in C#. You should be able to translate it to
C++/CLI easily. Google around a bit - I'm sure there are many more such
examples (I found this one in less than 30 seconds).
> Also i notice in the beta 2 express edition you cant change the
> "include" directory paths etc, is there a fix for this or is it
> missing becasue it is still beta ?
It's a bug in beta 2 that this feature is missing.
> Any release date for this package to become commercial on sale ?
November 7, 2005.
> Also i see the instructions for downloading the windows xp/2003 SDK
> and running it with this beta 2 edition. Why would you want this sdk
> ? and is there a similar download to add/learn the MFC with this
> package ?
You need the SDK if you want to do native (unmanaged) C++ windows
applications. If you want to use MFC, you have to buy Standard Edition or
higher.
> 2 last questions.
>
> do managed programs written with 2005 editions defiently require the
> 2.0 beta .net runtime to run or will they also run under 1.1 ?
Definitely 2.0. Note that a lot of managed code (C# or VB.NET) can be
compiled for either runtime. Since C++/CLI is new in VS2005, it can only
target the 2.0 runtime.
> Why is there a .net 2.0 beta sdk. Why would you need this other SDK
> when writing .net managed programs under 2005
You don't need to use Visual Studio. With the .NET SDK you can do managed
code development using a plain text editor and the command line build tools.
-cd
.
- References:
- VC++ .net 2005 express beta 2
- From: Peted
- VC++ .net 2005 express beta 2
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