Ah, hi wOOdy - thanks for the info - that explains why I was still getting /notifications/ until late 2016. I found A[V]FP fun to use, and there was some impressive technology/(e.g. "side by side" automatic COM registration )/ - I wonder why it didn't take off at least a bit more than it did - scalability? security? Windows Sockets problems? or just missed the boat? Another interesting non-starter was that Russian (?) webserver written in Foxpro.
On 14-Mar-2018 6:38 PM, Jürgen Wondzinski wrote:
Hi Andy,
Active FoxPro Pages (or AFP in short) was originally created by Prolib. After the insolvency in 2009 it was taken over by one of the largest user (BVL) and later on it moved to Christof Wollenhaupt's company FoxPert (who was the main product-developer at ProLib)
Thus if you look for www.Active-FoxPro-Pages.com or www.AFPages.com you'll end up at http://afpages.foxpert.net/
AFPages still works as expected on any Windows-based Webserver.
wOOdy
-----Ursprüngliche Nachricht----- Von: ProFox profox-bounces@leafe.com Im Auftrag von AndyHC Gesendet: Mittwoch, 14. März 2018 12:16 An: profox@leafe.com Betreff: AVFP - was [NF] Reporting in Python (Django)
Reading Thierry Nivelet's accurate description of the problems of using a Web Application as an end-user business solution (and his advocacy for FoxInCloud), I started wondering what happened to AVFP (Active Visual Foxpro pages). I got a couple of trivial web pages working based on their examples, but after CodePlex folded AVFP seemed to disapper as well (just a downloadable on the CodePlex archive site). Anybody know what happened to it? (For those who don't know it, it enables native VFP on a web server, in a similar manner to the original ASP).
p.s. iirc there used to be a similar ASP-alike for Python as part of XAMPP, but the Python bit got deprecated.
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