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ASP.NET and the Web ASP.NET and the Web ASP.NET and the Web Messages: 4 Messages: 4 Messages: 4 Printer friendly Printer friendly Printer friendly Post reply Post reply Post reply XML XML XML

JSP or ASP.net

Posted by: Aumer Hady on July 11, 2005 DIGG
Dear Sir/ Madam

First I want to thank you to give me your time and read my message.
Before a year I start working with java tech using (JSP, servlet, ejb, J2EE), but now the project which I worked with is finish and the give me another project with ASP.net, I donot know should I change to other technology after I worked with java and I become good, on more thing I can not find a job using java that's mean I will stay out if I donot accept.

Can you please help me I donot know what to do, can I work with both of them study java tech and MS tech, and fo you know any site talk about the compare between java tech and MS tech just for Internet application.

I know mymessage is very long, but realy I need your help.

thanks a lot

please if you can send the answer to me email :mr_ujh@yahoo.com

with my regards

Umar J. Hady

Threaded replies

·  JSP or ASP.net by Aumer Hady on Mon Jul 11 10:44:14 EDT 2005
  ·  Here you go... by Abishek Bellamkonda on Mon Jul 11 19:31:17 EDT 2005
    ·  Here you go... by Tim Gifford on Tue Jul 12 00:50:13 EDT 2005
      ·  Here you go... by Ant Kutschera on Tue Jul 12 06:10:24 EDT 2005
  ·  thank you by Aumer Hady on Thu Jul 14 04:17:30 EDT 2005
  Message #177558 Post reply Post reply Post reply Go to top Go to top Go to top

Here you go...

Posted by: Abishek Bellamkonda on July 11, 2005 in response to Message #177478
Ok a programmer is like a car driver. Currently you are used to driving Ford ( JSP ) and you are good at it. Do you think you can drive BMW ( .NET )? Ofcourse, yes you can. But yeah the locking, security systems and so on may be different. But all of them is part of learning curve. If you know both JSP and ASP.NEt then its good, you will have better understanding of both technologies their pros and cons. It is always good to learn new technologies. Learn them (YOU HAVE TO, IF YOU WANT TO SURVIVE IN IT).

Also if you want to learn more about .NET use this link below.

http://abibaby.blogspot.com/2005_07_01_abibaby_archive.html

  Message #177576 Post reply Post reply Post reply Go to top Go to top Go to top

Here you go...

Posted by: Tim Gifford on July 12, 2005 in response to Message #177558
If you are looking for biased opinions you came to the right place :)

If you were building business class libraries, Java and .NET are fairly similar, but .NET really shines is in the UI layer. ASP.NET is a joy to program and will blow your mind after working with JSP (or .asp for that matter).

  Message #177602 Post reply Post reply Post reply Go to top Go to top Go to top

Here you go...

Posted by: Ant Kutschera on July 12, 2005 in response to Message #177576
JSP doesnt really compare well to ASP.NET - Struts, JavaServerFaces and third party libraries combine well to give what ASP.NET gives.

For a comparison (but heavily biased towards MS tech), read http://msdn.microsoft.com/library/en-us/dnaspp/html/ASPNet-AspNet-J2ee-Struts.asp.

At the developer level, it is easier to market yourself as either a J2EE developer or a .NET developer. At architect level, you are not mature until you have seen and experienced both sides of the fence IMO. Go to job sites and look for jobs as a developer and there are not many requiring both technologies at the same time. Look for architect jobs and its more common though.

Cheers,

Ant

  Message #177946 Post reply Post reply Post reply Go to top Go to top Go to top

thank you

Posted by: Aumer Hady on July 14, 2005 in response to Message #177478
Dear Sir/Madam

I want to thank you for all your suggestions.

with my regards

Aumer J. Hady

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