It may have been a good product for programming languages that didn't supply screen designers, but at the place I used to work at, they used it even with Fox 2.0. Then they proceeded to loose track of the UI templates. As of last year, when I left the company, this meant there were several older programs that couldn't easily be modified for Y2K.
The decision to use UI was made by a VP who couldn't code at all. But he could create screens using UI, so he made everyone use UI.
PF
>If you're talking about UI Programmer by WallSoft, that was actually one of the most interesting products of its day. Essentially, it was a tool that let you roll your own code generator(s). It was designed for pushing text around and could be theoretically adapted to any language based on text files. At one point helper modules were available for C, as well as xBase.
(On an infant's shirt): Already smarter than Bush