Being replaced by something else is not always a better thing.
I once worked on a web-based mid tier, written in VFP, that served as a front end to 700+ terrabytes of data. It has been replaced as well.
The replacement was written in C++, was delivered 2+ years late, is slower, buggier, and has fewer features.
But at least they got rid of that bad old VFP app that just plain worked, and worked *well*.
Dan
>I usually get the answer that it's a dated reference when I refer to it as proof that VFP can scale, and they say they are sure it's been replaced by something else.
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