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by joshuaissac
1736 days ago
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> If you have code relying on it and haven't migrated to something supported it means your code is not maintained No, it does not. It means that Microsoft no longer provides support for the IDE. That does not prevent the developer from maintaining their own VB6 code. With some extra steps, the official IDE and compiler for VB6 can still be installed on Windows 10. Running programs built from VB6 is still supported. > written 2 decades ago with the coding standards of the era, the original developer team is gone and probably retired This applies regardless of the programming language to any codebase that has been around for long enough. |
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If you're comfortable with this then I don't think you're actively investing in your software.
>This applies regardless of the programming language to any codebase that has been around for long enough.
No, if you have a team actively maintaining the project you have the knowledge transfer in-house which is the second part of that sentence.