>Just curious. I love VFP but for me anyway, our corporate strategy is to move away from Foxpro and doing most rewrites in VB/ASP/SQL Server (ya, what else is new). I still use VFP for text parsing and other utility stuff but not for any new projects.
>
>I know most of us explored n-tier architecture with VFP and many of us have done client/server type apps but I have a feeling great many of us are using it for typical file server based apps where VFP still shines best. Am I wrong in my assessment?
This is how we use VFP. We have researched into going client-server, but we feel that we are running excellent as it is. We don't even have an NT Server machine as the file server yet (we use Workstation, but we have to change this as we are hitting the 10 connection limit).
We can implement changes/enhancements to the system very quickly because of VFP's OOP and wide range of built-in functions. No plans to change any time soon.
Joe
Joseph C. Kempel
Systems Analyst/Programmer
JNC