I am new to Visual Studio, C#, .NET and Core. I also regularly work with legacy systems (iSeries) and PHP to communicate with it. Everyday, I ask myself: What did you learn today? This is the result.
i'd have to say this actually looks clean? you have to take into context the time frame it was created and what was available then. "front end" development didn't exist in the slightest.
i inherited asp (classic) legacy code and grew through php that looks much like this and couldn't go past certain versions because of the "zend" restrictions/legacy connections. it is the reality of being a developer.
thanks for posting something so raw. it really gives people a grasp of what code is actually out there!
i'd have to say this actually looks clean? you have to take into context the time frame it was created and what was available then. "front end" development didn't exist in the slightest.
i inherited asp (classic) legacy code and grew through php that looks much like this and couldn't go past certain versions because of the "zend" restrictions/legacy connections. it is the reality of being a developer.
thanks for posting something so raw. it really gives people a grasp of what code is actually out there!
It was in 2013, at least we had Angular.js