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Information générale
Forum:
Visual FoxPro
Catégorie:
XML, XSD
Titre:
Versions des environnements
Visual FoxPro:
VFP 7 SP1
Database:
Visual FoxPro
Divers
Thread ID:
00972548
Message ID:
00974365
Vues:
21
Hi again,

>> You Wrote:
>> Thank you for the links!
>> What seems strange is that there seems little limitation to the size of
>> an HTML string that can be returned to a clien. Yet, XML (which aint that
>> much different from HTML), is restricted.

Yeah that's what I was thinking too. It may just be I'm not seeing the forest because of the tees (oops, trees...) but I haven't been able to find any info on my xml size problem. It would appear that this may be different on different machines with different memory, cpu, etc. but I have not confirmed this.

>> It would be neat if that limitation was reduced and a client ECMA Script
>> could work with the client's copy of the MSXML DOM to process the XML
>> (on the client side).

ECMA Script? I'm not familiar with this and haven't dove into MSXML DOM a whole lot either...

>> I will be jumping back into my XML stuff early next week. I don't know
>> about epiphanies *g*, but I am sure my explitives will be ripe. Learning
>> these technologies and making them do work is so thrilling that sleep
>> deprivation is almost enjoyable!:)

Ha! Yeah! And you know it's bad when you finally do get some sleep and then in the middle of the night in your sleep you hit the snooze button on the alarm clock and your wife asks what you're doing and you tell her you're hitting the SPACE BAR!

But anyway, I agree with you. My problem is that I want to make sure the technology I'm learning is the most robust for accessing VFP databases on a website.

>> ON ASP and Visual FoxPro COM - I need to model some behavior
>> (JavaScript/HTML IE Clients - Internet Information Server - ASP may not
>> be installed on some servers). I was thinking about doing this with CGI
>> (initially) and then, once the expected behaviors were achieved
>> moving the project to ASP.
>> I was thinking of using Visual FoxPro for the CGI COM. Any advice or
>> insights appreciated!

CGI is an intriguing thought. No experience in it whatsoever but I would be happy to share any vfp or asp snippets that I have with others.

-Regards!
Kevin Scott
kehvn@carolina.rr.com


Hey! It's not my fault. It's some General named Protection!
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