You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
Visual FoxExpress has been helping FoxPro developers build feature rich Fox applications for longer than anyone else. With Creating Visual FoxPro Applications with Visual FoxExpress, you'll learn the nuts and bolts of application development with VFE, starting with setting up a project and continuing on through user interfaces, reports, and security. Bob Archer and Dan Jurden have years of VFE experience under their belts, and it shows as you'll learn dozens of tips and tricks while getting a firm grounding on the entire application development process.
Ship it! Music to your ears or words that cause a cold sweat as you realize you now need to deploy the solution you have worked on for so long? Have you planned the deployment? Do you have the proper language in your contract with your customer? Do you have the proper install package? What media is the package going to be shipped on to the client? How will it be distributed? What happens after Setup.exe finishes? Do you have the support infrastructure in place? How are you going to handle updates and changes? There's a lot to think about, and deploying a solution requires careful planning. These questions and many more are answered based on real world experience within the pages of this book.
A thriller in a western setting which embraces every known cliché of the genre, dips them in cynicism, and hurls them right back at you. 1870's Wyoming, and the town of Limon is booming. Mining and cattle; and now the railroad, desperate for the revenue. With their grading crews slamming down the track and the construction gangs throwing up the new railhead and stockyards, the place is just bursting at the seams. Tradesmen and tramps; bankers and bums; the hopeful and the hopeless, all jostling with the corrupt and the immoral for a piece of the action in a wide open town just dripping with opportunity. Which is how the Great and the Greedy like it - up to a point. Now they plan to hold on ...
Much has been written about the battles that go on between software companies over market share. FoxTales is the story about one such battle, told from the perspective of a foot soldier--my perspective. When I started working for Fox Software as a young college grad, it was a company of barely over thirty people. The next four years brought many surprises, though. In that time, Fox would release a line of award winning database products, be sued by a larger rival company, grow to over 250 employees, and eventually outlive the rival to merge with Microsoft, moving all of us thousands of miles west. And to think, I could've been a farmer.
None
None
The naval aviation safety review.