I know the differences between ASP and ASP.NET generally, as I am new to both, so I don’t understand all of them, but I get the fact that ASP.NET is built on top of Microsofts .NET framework, and is the next generation of ASP, but it’s built from the ground up.
W3Schools and another question here on SO provided great help explaining the difference!
I was wondering if it is worth it to fully learn Classic-ASP before diving into ASP.NET.
Why do people still use Classic-ASP? I’ve heard about the benefits which ASP.NET provides, and it seems like it would be worth it to switch.
Do people still use Classic-ASP because of server issues, or just because they prefer to work in it for some reason?
I would like some guidance on which I should start learning first, and why if anyone has any good suggestions?
UPDATE:
Thanks for the very helpful posts everyone! They gave me a great indicator of what is important, and why!
Thanks!!
There’s little or no point learning classic asp as a precursor to asp.net as whilst similar in some respects(the
Server,Request,Responseobjects and their associated methods, etc), they’re different enough that one doesn’t serve as a gentle introduction to the other.If you’ve no need to know classic asp, definately go with asp.net as it’s “the way of the future”, be it in its MVC or WebForms guise. The only reason I can think of, now, to learn classic asp would be to support a legacy application. I’d be very surprised if there’s any new “greenfield” development being carried out in classic asp on any great scale. There’s also a great question (that I provided an answer to) that will give you some info on the differences between asp.net WebForms and MVC that’s well worth a read.
When it comes to deciding “which language” out of the choice of C# and VB.net, pick whichever you find most comprehensible, at least initially. You’d be advised to at least consider C# as examples, samples, tutorials and suchlike are much more readily available in it. One look at the C# tag vs. the vb.net tag (105,977 questions against 10,815) here on stackoverflow makes it quite clear which has the broader uptake.