>I don't wanna waste time studing someting I don't like
> as pascal and other things.
While this may be unpleasant at times, it isn't a complete waste of time. Ideally, a computer expert should know a wide variety of topics.
> Is it possible to graduate, I mean, to get a college certificate
> only learning VFP ?
I don't think so.
> If not, which graduate course is more suitable for somenone who
> likes VFP ?
Don't worry too much whether the course includes VFP or not. You can still learn VFP on your own. If the career you study doesn't include VFP, consider it a complement to what you learn on the Universal Thread, etc.
>
> Anybody know a good and worthing course on-line ?
This isn't exactly an "online university", but you can do much of your work over the Internet:
www.grantham.eduI am currently about to finish, with them, a "Bachellor of Science in Engineering Technology - with Major Emphasis on Computers". That means: emphasis on hardware, but they also have a computer course with emphasis on software.
The cost would be a little more than US$ 2000 per semester. This is too much for me; I am paying the old costs, which are about half this amount.
Hilmar.
Difference in opinions hath cost many millions of lives: for instance, whether flesh be bread, or bread be flesh; whether whistling be a vice or a virtue; whether it be better to kiss a post, or throw it into the fire... (from Gulliver's Travels)