>>and forget the old Codebook :)
>
>Nick;
>
>Never! It was my first framework, and I have fond memories of it. It just was not ready for the 100mhz CPU's that were "state of the art" at the time. Other frameworks were based upon it that are still in use, even though they do not want to admit it. Frameworks of today may owe more than just a bit to the original Codebook 3.0. If nothing else, it made many of us think about how to approach Visual FoxPro.
>
>Tom
I mean forget of using it directly :) Its ideas are still good but (IMHO) the implementation was dog slow, also some approaches (for example the menus) were so complicated that each time you return to that part you need to refresh you memory how it really works before you will be able to make the changes.
Nick Neklioudov
Universal Thread Consultant
3 times Microsoft MVP - Visual FoxPro
"I have not failed. I've just found 10,000 ways that don't work." - Thomas Edison