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Visual FoxPro may not be dead, but,...
Message
Information générale
Forum:
Visual FoxPro
Catégorie:
Autre
Versions des environnements
Visual FoxPro:
VFP 9 SP2
Database:
Visual FoxPro
Divers
Thread ID:
01430847
Message ID:
01430858
Vues:
206
Hey, I'm 62 and the transition from Fox to .net has made programming fun again. .NET is really not that difficult but it requires a willingness to stop believing anything that isn't the same as we did it in Foxpro is somehow harder or wrong or only because the people doing it don't know how cool the Fox way was.

You can do this. The trick is to get functional fast so - the very thing that made Fox so approachable. I chose to do that by adopting a framework written by former fox folks which made the whole data handling hurdle much lower. Then I could concentrate on the language and the .NET framework.

The great thing is the amount of material available for learning and the communities of developers that are very reminiscent of what we had in Fox 15 years ago. Go to stackoverflow.com for example and you'll see a forum where technical questions are often answered within one minute and they have 50 Sergeys <s>

In a year you can be a 57 year old, experienced developer who can get things done in c#. Right now that is a lot more marketable than a 30 year old Foxpro Guru.

Remember how exciting it was when you first learned Fox and felt how powerful it was? .NET right now is really, really powerful and the IDE, community, and power of the language exceeds anything we've known in Fox even in it's heyday.



>Guys, I have run into very little FoxPro work since my lay-off back in November of last year, 2008. The jobs are becoming more and more scarce. IT Departments shoot it down. Microsoft kills it too by its decision to not market the Fox.
>
>Visual FoxPro is still an outstanding product. It is probably more popular outside of the United States and Canada than here in north America.
>
>Compared to Microsoft's .NET products, and I did research to prove this, there are few opportunities with the Fox now. When you go to, for example, http://www.indeed.com, and put in FoxPro and a city and state, FoxPro comes up with 0 to 1, or maybe as high as 2 opportunities, but Visual Basic and C# come up with 40, 50 or hundreds of opportunities depending on the city you look at. We can still build good apps in VFP, but if no one offers work in VFP, but only in JAVA, ColdFusion, VB, ASP.NET, or C#, then you have to go with the market, which in my case, means completely retraining.
>
>At age 56, it is very difficult to stop everything going on in my life and retrain mself to some other software development tool and who is going to hire a 56-year old man who just started learning C#?
>
>I guess I need some cheese with my wine, right?
>
>I've even taken California's teacher exam called CBEST in order to qualify me to teach here, but they are not hiring anyhere in the 11 school districts I've called.
>
>For years I've loved using Visual FoxPro and the old FoxPro for all of my development; it made sense.
>
>Any advice is genuinely appreciated. I am feeling kind of lost now.


Charles Hankey

Though a good deal is too strange to be believed, nothing is too strange to have happened.
- Thomas Hardy

Half the harm that is done in this world is due to people who want to feel important. They don't mean to do harm-- but the harm does not interest them. Or they do not see it, or they justify it because they are absorbed in the endless struggle to think well of themselves.

-- T. S. Eliot
Democracy is two wolves and a sheep voting on what to have for lunch.
Liberty is a well-armed sheep contesting the vote.
- Ben Franklin

Pardon him, Theodotus. He is a barbarian, and thinks that the customs of his tribe and island are the laws of nature.
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