User | Post |
Jesper
Posts: 271/2390 |
Originally posted by dan Plus the fact that ActiveX is riddled with security holes didn't help matters much.
Not any more than Java applets. The difference is that the VM is often much safer than the individual ActiveX controls. |
neotransotaku
Posts: 282/4016 |
Well, ActiveX is still actively used by the only people who found it useful, Microsoft. ActiveX can still be seen if you try to view Office Documents in IE and maybe a few other things that Microsoft. Other than that, I really do not know any third party stuff that uses ActiveX but I may be wrong... |
dan
Posts: 26/782 |
Plus the fact that ActiveX is riddled with security holes didn't help matters much. |
Weasel
Posts: 87/454 |
Originally posted by Acmlm ActiveX objects that can be put on webpages ... and wasn't that only for Internet Explorer, anyway?
Yeah, only IE supported them, or IE was the only browser that supported it well. Whatever.
Anyway, the target for web designers is to make their website look good in other browsers, not just one. So using ActiveX would look like crap in other browsers. Hence it flopped |
Acmlm
Posts: 393/1173 |
ActiveX objects that can be put on webpages ... and wasn't that only for Internet Explorer, anyway?
But yeah, there's also that Internet Explorer control that can be used in Visual Basic ... there's even one for Flash, in which I was able to load Flash games and alter the variables to cheat |
Tuvai
Posts: 123/211 |
Originally posted by dan You can create a stupid ActiveX thing in Visual Basic that can go onto websites. But nobody uses ActiveX anymore.
That be the webbrowser control? I recently used that, that is, before I learned to use the internet transfer control. |
Dish
Posts: 16/596 |
Originally posted by dan But nobody uses ActiveX anymore.
Anymore? You mean there was a time when people actually did use them? XD |
dan
Posts: 24/782 |
You can create a stupid ActiveX thing in Visual Basic that can go onto websites. But nobody uses ActiveX anymore. |
Darth Coby
Posts: 333/1371 |
Nope, you can't make a website in VB. You CAN however connect to your DB and such. |
Vystrix Nexoth
Posts: 92/348 |
the closest you can come to making a website in VB is to use ASP.NET, in which you can use, among other things, VB (or something like it) to generate web pages server-side a la PHP. |
Tuvai
Posts: 122/211 |
If you're looking for a program where you can make a website by just using 'drag and drop' buttons, images, tables and whatever, you should get Microsoft Frontpage or Macromedia Dreamweaver. Visual Basic is for making real applications, not websites. |
Itachi Sennin
Posts: 14/217 |
lol ok...thanks anyways.... |
Acmlm
Posts: 383/1173 |
Well, I guess you can create a program that generates HTML code, but other than that ... executable programs and HTML are totally different things |
witeasprinwow
Posts: 187/555 |
In short:
No.
In long:
You could technically make a VB program that functioned as a website and have users download it and run it to view the content, but that would make it a program, not a website. Learn some basic HTML and make some graphics to work around it. Frontpage is nice, but not really necessary. |
Itachi Sennin
Posts: 13/217 |
I just got visual basic. so u can call me stupid for asking this question. but can i make a site in vb??I mean...is it possible to type the stuff in, put in pictures and stuff, and save it as a html?????(i only want to do this because i lost my microsoft frontpage...) |