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Design Patterns 6...
Killing Objects
Interview: .NET E...
VFP and Accountin...
Design Patterns 5...
Design Patterns 4...
How to rebuild fr...
Design Patterns 3...
Foxfire! Web vers...
Special effects o...
Design Patterns 4...
Design Patterns 3...
Windows Services ...
Asynchronous Use ...
Building VFP appl...
A class that buil...
Saving and retrie...
Data dictionary a...
Agile Series: Uni...
Agile Series: Bad...
Design Patterns 6...
Design Patterns 5...
How to rebuild fr...
Special effects o...
Why would anyone ...
Design Patterns 2...
Special effects o...
Pagination in Vis...
Design Patterns 1...
Advanced pie char...
Killing Objects
Interview: .NET E...
VFP and Accountin...
Foxfire! Web vers...
VFP menus and XML
Microsoft's Yair ...
VisioModeler - a ...
Foxfire! - The Ma...
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Confessions of a VB.NET developer
Editorial
Les Pinter
Erick Miranda Duarte Tips
Great tips for Visual FoxPro developers
Erick Miranda
Community News
Nick Neklioudov resumes the highlights in the VFP community in the last month
Nick Neklioudov
Design Patterns 6 - Singleton
The name of this pattern refers to a simple and only instance of an object, typically an application-wide service. In a more formal definition, the Singleton ensures that a given class has just one and only instance, and provide an access point to it.
Martin Salias
Killing Objects
Since the time we program with object orientation, we can play at being all-powerful, deciding the lifetime of our objects, and limiting "what they can, and what they can't, do". Now, in some cases these objects seem to take on a life of their own, and don't respect our wishes. As the old saying goes, "the computer does what I tell it to do, not always what I want it to do".
Oscar Zarate
Interview: .NET Extender for VFP & VFPCompiler for .NET
When no one was expecting things more radical than the Sedna project in the VFP arena, a small company appeared offering not only a way to fully integrate .NET classes into VFP applications, but also previewing a native IL compiler for VFP code which even keeps all the data manipulation language. Sounds too good to be true? Know more about these impressive projects in this great interview.
Samuel David
VFP and Accounting - Part I
Accounting and computer systems should not be tied to any one language in particular. You can design a computer system to be written in Fortran, Pascal, Cobol, VFP or Visual Basic.NET. However, the love of my life as far as computer languages are concerned is Visual FoxPro and that is why the rest of this article will show examples written in VFP.
Rafael Copquin
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