This is by far the best Visual Studio tutorial I have seen. I have used paid courses that doesn't even come close to this. The instructor is very clear when explaining things and understands that it's important to start simple and save the complicated stuff for later. Thank you very much for this excellent tutorial video.
Dear trainer, I am so impressed about how good, simple and effective your tutorial is, thank you very much indeed. Although I am not a beginner, I could get some surprising information for me in the course (this was my intention). If you allow me I would like to make a suggestion from my point of view: If you declare a variable, don't use a prefix to keeps them simple and legible. Thank you again for your efforts.
Excellent!! I hope there are additional courses that explain additional code. Walking through each step slowly and explaining each piece is exactly what someone new to Visual Basic needs. Thank you so much!!
I learned VB back in the Windows 3.1 days with VB3 Pro, and never looked back. I've used VB as my primary language for everything, and even use it to write Android apps (using B4A). There's nothing I can't write with VB except OS kernels, device drivers, and high-power games. And I absolutely LOVE it when the C# snobs tell me that VB isn't a real language - that's when I remind them that C# is just VB with brackets. I prove it by reminding them that VB and C# are installed in Visual Studio with the same checkbox. They HATE that.
As someone whose a straight up beginner never opened visual basic or studio or anything like that and has auditory processing disorder , I clearly understand you and easy to follow along. Thanks a lot and this has litterally been the easiest and best Visual Studio tutorial I have found. Will be continuing to use. Thanks for diligence and simplicity and you may not even realize but your diction is easier for those of us with forms of disability.
I am a foreigner. I use YT's built-in translator and I can understand some English. It is a very good course. It is very good for beginners or review. The teacher's lecture speed is not fast, which is very suitable for people from non-English speaking countries.
Wow!! I am studying 16bit assembly language and wanted an understanding of how messagebox works in windows so I typed into youtube search box VISUAL BASIC 3.0 to start at the beginning and stumbled over this video. What a blessing in disguise! I can't appreciate this enough. Thanks Kevin.
I've been programming 25 years. I've never used this language. Dabbled in VB6 in college. Was great, but I was under the impression VB was old, and no longer used. I always avoided it. My son is learning it in college so I want to learn it to help him. I'm actually surprised and impressed. I may end up using this for a few projects myself.
Thank you! I have to develop a POC and haven't coded to build an app in quite a while, but with Kevin's straightforward manner, it started rushing back to me at "Hello World". Awesome!
For youre information i'm still using VB6 and i still make a good mony. No body care what language i use. They care about the resulte. And the result is allways goid as i and the client expect. So nessage for some peoples in comments if you like c# or python or java... We dont care. Go and do somthing and please stop crying here. We love VB and he will never die.
Exactly. Love VB 💝. These java, python, C# C cultist look down on VB as not real language. But i dont care, most of work i done is in VB and i made money out of it. Thats the only thing matters. 😆👍
Feel the same. I don't know why we were taught this over something like Python. It's not like anyone still uses the language. Even Java would have been better, even though it's harder, there are a lot more resources for it.
Just wanted to learn something new after I worked years with a scripting language (AutoIt), and somehow I found this video. Now I'm in love with VB :D Absolutely undersandable! Great job, THANK YOU!
My first development job was all the way back in 1999. It was porting VB3 apps to VB6 because VB3 only used 2 digit years in its dates... I honestly haven't even LOOKED at any Visual Basic in 20 years.
i have realy appreciate this clear explanation . as am going to sit for my final national examinations i pray that i should remember all i have learnt here. Thank you God bless you
I had no idea VB was still around. I thought Microsoft dumped it in favor of C#. Great first language to learn and easy enough to go from VB to C# when the time is right
That's what i thought at first as well.......last time i heard about anything being done in VB was 12 years ago...and even then people were dumping it in favour of Java
I always wanted to know why they couldn’t bring in Visual Basic form making into Visual Cpp. It’s so easy to make great form based programs in VB in VC it’s a pita
Great tutorial, thank you! I subscribed to your channel and look forward to finding other helpful videos. I'm a hobbyist, I program for fun, it's not my profession. So, it's always refreshing when I find good material like this.
1:27:28 kommenT-ale-Vu! hahahahaha (comment allez-vous "komo(n) ale vu") . I enjoyed listening to your french pronounciation. Not bad vid, needed this since I need to transfer VB Code to C# in our company... needed some basics...
This was such an amazing and helpful course. I am currently learning and studying for my A level job and breaking down each component made learning fun and simple. Thank you!
Thank you, as a procrastinator I was able to learn this with shaky proficiency before a competition (I was roped into it with the promise of programming but was hit with Virtual Basic lmao). Anyways thank you man you’re a lifesaver.
In other words Microsoft wholly based VB on HyperCard (1987) and HyperText from Apple Computers and Macintosh. HyperCard was a software application and development kit for Apple Macintosh and Apple IIGS computers, and was among the first successful hypermedia systems.
Correct me if I'm wrong but 1) Most US Colleges stopped teaching this and 2) Major of companies stopped using this too. That's what I was taught in college.
A lot of companies have legacy code bases that use visual basic. I'm at a company right now where most of the application is visual basic and asp classic. We're actively migrating to C#/TS, but we still have to do things in these legacy langauges.
I always wanted to learn the visual basics, I think I finally have a chance to fulfill my dream! Thank you for the great work! Teacher Kevin is just amazing!
I’m doing Computer Science for my GCSE’s and our course work is making a fully working form on vb, I was wondering if someone could help me with some code, or tell me if it’s even possible to do? Essentially, I want the code to take information from two different combo boxes and display them onto a list box at the click of a button. Is this possible? Thanks a bunch.
Just got to the end of Part 5 and I'm wondering if there's a quick way of sorting the list box so that it's in alphabetical order? (without simply re-organising the code itself). My very limited experience with coding tells me that using time/ tick, or the VB equivalent, is a waste of memory... so maybe just OnLoad (enter magical code here to sort it :D). Loving the video btw! I saw someone mention macros for Excel and decided it was time for a VB crash course XD
This is the best tutorial, only problem is the screen is not zoomed enough, font is small. So facing problem with visibility, specially when I split screen.
some may step back by the lenght of the video but my god you explained it all very well and udnerstandble, well done I was able to follow up on things while kept intrested,
Hey thanks for the wonderful tutorial, could anybody help with how to manually restrict what you can put inside a Input Box so the user cannot crash the solution by giving a very big number?
In the last tutorial he says he will teach us more about something in future videos, but I can't find a single other video by them of VB here or on that website of theirs. Anyone know anything? Did they ever do any more videos to followup on this? I really like how he explains stuff.
Good effort pl use better presentation so that we can read that you write on screen. Its excellent lectures visible in laptop but difficult to see on mobile. However excellent work keep it up
@@anshumanxda That's simple too. Every high level language is the same, at core: - 3 common data types: strings (or arrays of characters), numbers, and booleans, stored in memory and accesed later through labels which we call variables; - operators: arithmetic and logical; - conditionals: the logic happens here, based on one or more boolean (logical) expressions; - loops: repetition, repetition, repetition; - functions: reusable blocks of code which may be seen also as a list of instructions grouped together and labeled, which performs a particular task given some (or none) inputs, and may return some (or no) value(s); Those are the main parts of any high level programming language. They differ only in syntax, the libraries available, and the purpose of the language.
This is because VBA had its syntax derived from Visual Basic. Some say VBA is a minor part of VB dedicated to Microsoft Office advanced tasks and personalization. It's incredible you haven't heard of Visual Basic, but know about Visual Basic for Application.