>Greetings,
>
>It appears that many of you are just too busy to put your 2 cents into this topic. Perhaps the rumors I'm hearing about the demise of the major VFP frameworks has more substance that even I could have imagined?
>
>Just review what I hear about our VFP framework industry icons:
>
I'd take a look at Visual Fox Express. It's still being actively developed and supported, supports n-tier architecture, and (since you've use MM's) won't have such as steep learning curve. Some of the built-in wizards make it a snap to build some of the more basic data-maintenance forms. It's pretty bound to meta-data, which can be a good (and bad) thing. Good in that it's flexible, bad in that I've found tracing through meta-data driven apps. can be maddening. I'm not currently using it, but we did evaluate it in the past. If this is going to be worked on by a bunch of developer's at the same time, I'd ask Mike & Toni about how to sync the meta-data. That was a sticking point for us (I've heard they've come up with a solution for it).
I've use Maxframe in the past and it was pretty easy to get into (although it was definitely "monolithic" at the time). The various code styles kind of bugged me, though. I was used to the more consistent code Kevin wrote. It had a lot of code which works around various quirks in VFP behavior, which can be nice. I can be obsessive about UI stuff, but there are work arounds for things I just never noticed (Drew paid a lot of attention to some things I probably wouldn't have; I mean that in a good way).