Mailing Lists
Sign In Sign Up
  • Sign In
  • Sign Up
  • Manage this list

Keyboard Shortcuts

Thread View

  • j: Next unread message
  • k: Previous unread message
  • j a: Jump to all threads
  • j l: Jump to MailingList overview

2026

  • February
  • January

2025

  • December
  • November
  • October
  • September
  • August
  • July
  • June
  • May
  • April
  • March
  • February
  • January

2024

  • December
  • November
  • October
  • September
  • August
  • July
  • June
  • May
  • April
  • March
  • February
  • January

2023

  • December
  • November
  • October
  • September
  • August
  • July
  • June
  • May
  • April
  • March
  • February
  • January

2022

  • December
  • November
  • October
  • September
  • August
  • July
  • June
  • May
  • April
  • March
  • February
  • January

2021

  • December
  • November
  • October
  • September
  • August
  • July
  • June
  • May
  • April
  • March
  • February
  • January

2020

  • December
  • November
  • October
  • September
  • August
  • July
  • June
  • May
  • April
  • March
  • February
  • January

2019

  • December
  • November
  • October
  • September
  • August
  • July
  • June
  • May
  • April
  • March
  • February
  • January

2018

  • December
  • November
  • October
  • September
  • August
  • July
  • June
  • May
  • April
  • March
  • February
  • January

2017

  • December
  • November
  • October
  • September
  • August
  • July
  • June
  • May
  • April
  • March
  • February
  • January

2016

  • December
  • November
  • October
  • September
  • August
  • July
  • June
  • May
  • April
  • March
  • February
  • January
List overview
Download
thread

X#

Alan Bourke
7 Feb 2017 7 Feb '17
10:22 a.m.

Don't remember seeing this mentioned here before but it looks interesting.

https://www.xsharp.info/forum

You may have heard of Vulcan.NET which is an xBase language in more of the Clipper vein and which supports Visual Objects projects.

Anyway the consensus among developers is that Vulcan.NET is dying or dead, and so some of the developers have struck out on their own to implement an open-source .NET implementation of xBase.

"In April 2015 a group of concerned customers and some members of the GrafX development team have talked about starting a new open source project to give the xBase language for .NET a new future. This initiative is called XSharp. This was partially inspired by the fact that Microsoft has published the source code to its C# and Visual Basic compilers under an open source license (.NET Compiler Platform "Roslyn"[1]). The plan is to create a new development language (compiler, runtime libraties, IDE, tools) where the compiler is partially based on the Roslyn source code."

While it will initially support Vulcan\Clipper\VO type syntax (which is in the VFP ballpark but not identical) they also intend to support VFP syntax next. I would imagine it would be core VFP syntax, dropping all the legacy stuff like @ .. SAY and defunct SYS() functions and so forth. I *think* they intend to support DBF files natively.

Anyway, worth keeping an eye on at least.

--

Alan Bourke

alanpbourke (at) fastmail (dot) fm

Links:

1. https://roslyn.codeplex.com/

--- StripMime Report -- processed MIME parts --- multipart/alternative text/plain (text body -- kept) text/html ---

0 0
Reply

Back to the thread

Back to the list

Powered by HyperKitty version 1.3.7.