Ćao ljudi,
I'm just talking to a friend about programming and learning this.
That friend and I have been struggling through all programming languages for 3 years and then got along well with C #.
The problem is, my friend and I don't live in an apartment (which would be strange) and always have problems communicating.
So now we have the idea that someone gets a laptop. The only question is what such a laptop needs to run VS19 etc. Smoothly and maybe a little test game in Unity and how much it costs.
I would be happy if one of you is more familiar with it than I'm, since hardware stuff is not really mine.
Every laptop is fast enough to code. VS19 is a monster, but that too runs on all current hardware.
Perfect thank you.
As I said, any reasonably up-to-date laptop is enough to run Visual Studio.
But in another area I have something to say:
be sure to use an anti-glare (matt) display - glossy "brilliant" displays are good for photos and films, but not if you want to see small details like reading
Numeric keypad - or external keyboard
as many pixels as possible - unfortunately laptops with more than Full HD are special devices today (I still mourn my 1920 × 1200 display)
external mouse (easy to retrofit)
Mouse and keyboard if possible Bluetooth - saves one of the too few USB sockets
Remote maintenance software - something that you can use to look at each other on the screen
Second monitor to mirror the friend's screen
Third party monitor for the program being developed
possibly fast graphics card at Unity
Etc.
I can recommend this: https://www.expert.de/shop/unsere-produkte/computer-zubehor/notebooks/laptops/17044020134-255-g7-9tv58es-silber-notebook.html?adword=zentrale_gads%2Fstore%2F17044020134-255-g7-9tv58es-silber-notebook&branch_id=20664203 The price-performance ratio is very good for this equipment.
Mirrored displays are not good for photos and films…
Since it took me too long to edit, here as a new comment:
shiny "brilliant" displays are good for photos and films
Mirrored displays are not good for photos and films…
as many pixels as possible
A matter of taste.
Third party monitor for the program being developed
To do this, he also needs enough sockets. Is not really necessary now - especially if you want to move around with your laptop, which is what you want.
Second monitor to mirror the friend's screen
You want to meet.
possibly fast graphics card at Unity
No. Especially when it should only be a "small test project".
That's right if you value quality more than impression.
What glossy displays are actually good for is to impress inexperienced customers in stingy and stupid markets. I should have thought two seconds longer.