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VFP 9.0, the most stable or unstable released version?
Message
De
14/12/2005 06:29:48
 
 
À
13/12/2005 20:37:53
Information générale
Forum:
Visual FoxPro
Catégorie:
Autre
Divers
Thread ID:
01076470
Message ID:
01077790
Vues:
84
>I would agree, Peter, but you have to understand that I am constrained in what facts I can present. I cannot, by contract, list bugs or bug counts - and I wouldn't anyway ethically - but I can provide generalities.

Fully understandable.

>In general: We had a lot more tools and techniques for VFP 9 to find bugs and we used them arduously. Since VFP 3, the tools and procedures used to find VFP bugs have grown dramatically - furthermore, the ability to create regression tests to ensure that squashed bugs stay squashed has grown and the test suite has grown commensurately.
>
>Unless we're talking about completely new features, code coverage on existing features is pretty extensive.
>
>And for VFP 9: Major parts (report engine, SQL) of VFP were overhauled...the trade-off was - as always - risk between new functionality and breaking existing code. I have to admit that we rolled the dice. With our limited budget and resources, we assumed risks.
>
>But what were we supposed to do? I was under intense pressure to cut features and as a long-time VFP developer I didn't want to do that. I revamped our testing process many times to try to achieve an optimal testing environment.
>
>I believe we achieved the best that could be done under the circumstances. VFP9 is doggone stable. That it is iffey with a dot-matrix printer is regretable but would testing for that been worth taking resources away from other critical improvements? I think not.

This came to my mind when I woke up this morning: Did MS only refer to crashes, or also to other types of bugs, when they claimed that vfp9 is the most stable version so far? I hope you can afford to answer this question.



>>>Yeah, Jess.....it does annoy me :-)
>>
>>But John, rather than stating it indeed annoys you, you'd better take some time to comment with facts and arguments. Jess has only been argumenting and you shouldn't be annoyed by that. Arguments and facts are a far better service to us all here: it makes things clearer. Your arguments are of importance to us. We appreciate them.
Groet,
Peter de Valença

Constructive frustration is the breeding ground of genius.
If there’s no willingness to moderate for the sake of good debate, then I have no willingness to debate at all.
Let's develop superb standards that will end the holy wars.
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If you find this message rude or offensive or stupid, please take a step away from the keyboard and try to think calmly about an eventual a possible alternative explanation of my message.
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