Have you considered joining the 21st century and learning C#?Got contacted for VB6 Dev work, there programmer retired, not the only 1 using 20+ year old software LOL
Heard rumours they where making a VB7 same style as VB6 just upto date, sadly no sign.

Have you considered joining the 21st century and learning C#?![]()
Still miss coding games Amiga and C64 in Assemblybeen 30years FFS
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I don't think I came across any of those. I did come across people who were saying that below $X dollars an hour they cannot maintain their current lifestyle and are not willing to work in the field. By lifestyle I mean mortgage, family, etc - not luxuries. There must be a threshold below which you will refuse to work as hard, no?Lazy entitled slackers who don't want to do any work, think they should be paid $100+ an hour just because they have in demand skills.
I don't think I came across any of those.
I heard the same rumors. But the last I heard, the Office team supporting VBA(/VB6) has its focus on supporting automation within the Office suite, rather than evolving into an independent language. Its certainly not going away anytime soon ... how would finance departments survive ?Got contacted for VB6 Dev work, there programmer retired, not the only 1 using 20+ year old software LOL
Heard rumours they where making a VB7 same style as VB6 just upto date, sadly no sign.
(I'm kidding of course ... sort of)Do you see much demand for Python/R? If there were a business case ($$$) for migrating my existing systems that's likely the direction I'd go.I Know it vaguely, well got a cheat sheet of Syntax hanging around from the last time I had to learn it and code it, and Java Script for Google Sheet app and various other languages.
No body wants it, RARE, I don't turn it down or choose to code in it unless I really have to.
Still miss coding games Amiga and C64 in Assemblybeen 30years FFS
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Do you see much demand for Python/R? If there were a business case ($$$) for migrating my existing systems that's likely the direction I'd go.