>>If I would be back in time, when designing a table in VFP, I would have avoided any logical type and used a numeric 1 to hold 0 for False and 1 for True. Despite the fact that we have a Bit type in SQL Server, when doing the query, we have to consider using something like MyField=1 or MyField=0. The numeric value should seem more universal in SQL commands that a logical/boolean type. Is that correct?
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>correct
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>>As is the case now, in order to support those two environments, when comes time to deal with a SQL Server backend, I have to convert, at the framework level, any boolean parameter into a bit 0/1 if I hit a SQL Server backend. But, if that parameter would have been originally a numeric 1, I wouldn't have to deal with that at all and simply pass 0 or 1 in my parameter without worrying to convert based on the backend, if applicable, as the numeric 1 would be universal.
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>But you would have to worry that "newer" trends in backends might grow a boolean type. Thus it should be delegated to the adapter between business and data tier.
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>>Any feedback on how you negotiate with that when dealing with VFP/SQL Server environment?
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>If you have any kind of tiered approach I'd argue strongly against directly programming to [0,1].
Thanks, this is exactly what I thought.