Plateforme Level Extreme
Abonnement
Profil corporatif
Produits & Services
Support
Légal
English
Visual FoxPro & DevDays
Message
De
18/12/1997 09:05:16
 
Information générale
Forum:
Visual FoxPro
Catégorie:
Conférences & événements
Divers
Thread ID:
00066351
Message ID:
00066874
Vues:
62
>I only have one thought to add to this thread. This is, I always seem to be seeing in some way, shape or form, the abilities and advantages of VFP and FoxPro 2.x before that being undermined by, pardon the adjectives but, misinformed idiots. This thread can answer another threads question of why there seem to be more jobs for VB than VFP. If the DevDays agenda goes as suggested then VB will be seen as M$ developing cornerstone while VFP is just a third rate afterthought.

There is more VB developers that VFP developers. That is because both products are focus for 2 different audiences. We can't compare both. They are dedicated for their own market. You have about 1/10th of today's application which required a powerful database and CLS front-end and full OOP engine - just to name a few big names. The rest is mostly small applications where VB can do the job and VFP might be overkill.

As for a third rate, this is also related to big companies boycotting VFP. I've seen big companies throwing thousands and millions to the window because they have to remain in VB environment to develop big database application which requires also OOP. Yes, I mention OOP because for most of those companies, they thing VB is OOP. It is also related in part to the fact that VB is shown everywhere and IS people thing this is the bible. We also saw some evaluations from a big company, not the mention the name, where big companies are reading their evaluations as a bible as well. On the other end, as stated yesterday, VFP as survived without having marketing, at least, far from what VB had. But, this didn't help to have VFP recognized by many corporations where it is totally forbidden to use VFP to develop and where the requirements of some applications are to do develop in OOP and benefit of full powerful database and C/S engine. Yes, I always missed that part and always found that to be a joke.
Michel Fournier
Level Extreme Inc.
Designer, architect, owner of the Level Extreme Platform
Subscribe to the site at https://www.levelextreme.com/Home/DataEntry?Activator=55&NoStore=303
Subscription benefits https://www.levelextreme.com/Home/ViewPage?Activator=7&ID=52
Précédent
Suivant
Répondre
Fil
Voir

Click here to load this message in the networking platform