Plateforme Level Extreme
Abonnement
Profil corporatif
Produits & Services
Support
Légal
English
Sybase Anywhere - good enough for VFP - Any feed-back ?
Message
De
23/06/1997 13:10:53
Matt Mc Donnell
Mc Donnell Software Consulting
Boston, Massachusetts, États-Unis
 
 
À
23/06/1997 12:43:35
Information générale
Forum:
Visual FoxPro
Catégorie:
Client/serveur
Divers
Thread ID:
00037452
Message ID:
00037456
Vues:
32
>I have been testing Sybase Anywhere (previously WATCOM SQL) for a while here on Novell and WIN95 standalone. I have always been impressed by its superb SQL grammar and low-pricing.
>
>However earlier versions were unusable with VFP3 (lots of bugs related
>to VFP, sybase or ODBC or the 3 of them, don't know).
>
>But I found that the most recent version downloaded from sybase web site was really easy to set up (in minutes), easy to administer and
>the product seems to cooperate with the Fox Enfin!
>
>Possible I should to move ahead from test to production on midsize
>databases but, up to know, i have found very little feedback
>of Sybase except has a development companion product to PB.
>
>Has anyone real-life experience of the tool ?
>
>Thanks in advance
>
>François

You want to use a local database product as a database for FoxPro???? Whatever for??? The FoxPro database engine is MUCH faster and none of the 'Anywhere' products can handle large databases any better than Foxpro.

Up until 2.6, I could understand the frustration of some using Fox databases (tables) particularly because the Fox SQL was not ANSI standard. But 5.0 is real close to ANSI, so I don't understand why you would want to use another stand-alone product to support VFP. Even if it was AS fast (which it's not), I would still argue that having to go through an ODBC filter would be enough reason not to do it.

I have also heard that both Sybase Anywhere and SQL Anywhere do not fully support CTLIB, as they both claim to. They both fall well short of the real thing.

If you're using it as a development or demo companion...do it. They're both pretty good. But beyond that, I don't see any reason to do so.

Matt
Matt McDonnell
...building a better mousetrap with moldy cheese...
Précédent
Suivant
Répondre
Fil
Voir

Click here to load this message in the networking platform