What are the advantages of C# over VB.NET and vice versa?

 The choice between C# and VB.NET is largely one of subjective     preference. Some people like C#'s terse syntax, others like VB.NET's     natural language, case-insensitive approach. Both have access to the same     framework libraries. Both will perform largely equivalently (with a few     small differences which are unlikely to affect most people, assuming     VB.NET is used with <code>Option Strict</code> on). Learning the .NET framework itself is    a much bigger issue than learning either of the languages, and it's perfectly possible    to become fluent in both - so don't worry <i>too</i> much about which to plump for. There are,     however, a few actual differences which may affect your decision:  <h5>VB.NET Advantages</h5><ul>    <li>Support for optional parameters - very handy for some COM interoperability</li>    <li>      Support for late binding with <code>Option Strict</code> off - type safety at compile time      goes out of the window, but legacy libraries which don't have strongly typed interfaces      become easier to use.    </li>    <li>      Support for named indexers (aka properties with parameters).    </li>    <li>      Various legacy VB functions (provided in the <code>Microsoft.VisualBasic</code> namespace, and can be      used by other languages with a reference to the <code>Microsoft.VisualBasic.dll</code>). Many of      these can be harmful to performance if used unwisely, however, and many people believe they should      be avoided for the most part.    </li>    <li>      The <code>with</code> construct: it's a matter of debate as to whether this is an advantage or not,      but it's certainly a difference.    </li>    <li>      Simpler (in expression - perhaps more complicated in understanding) event handling, where      a method can declare that it handles an event, rather than the handler having to be set up in code.    </li>    <li>      The ability to implement interfaces with methods of different names. (Arguably this makes it harder      to find the implementation of an interface, however.)    </li>    <li>       <code>Catch ... When ...</code> clauses, which allow exceptions to be filtered based on runtime expressions        rather than just by type.    </li>    <li>      The VB.NET part of Visual Studio .NET compiles your code in the background. While this is considered an      advantage for small projects, people creating very large projects have found that the IDE slows down considerably      as the project gets larger.    </li>  </ul><h5>C# Advantages</h5><ul>    <li>      XML documentation generated from source code comments. (This is coming in VB.NET with      Whidbey (the code name for the next version of Visual Studio and .NET), and there are tools which will do it with existing VB.NET code      already.)    </li>    <li>Operator overloading - again, coming to VB.NET in Whidbey.</li>    <li>      Language support for unsigned types (you can use them from VB.NET, but they aren't in the language      itself). Again, support for these is coming to VB.NET in Whidbey.    </li>    <li>      The <code>using</code> statement, which makes unmanaged resource disposal simple.    </li>    <li>      Explicit interface implementation, where an interface which is already implemented in a base class      can be reimplemented separately in a derived class. Arguably this makes the class harder to understand,      in the same way that member hiding normally does.    </li>    <li>      Unsafe code. This allows pointer arithmetic etc, and can improve performance in some situations.      However, it is not to be used lightly, as a lot of the normal safety of C# is lost (as the name implies).      Note that unsafe code is still managed code, i.e. it is compiled to IL, JITted, and run within the CLR.    </li>  </ul><p>    Despite the fact that the above list appears to favour VB.NET (if you don't mind waiting for Whidbey),    many people prefer C#'s terse syntax enough to make them use C# instead.  

[Author: Jon Skeet]