FOXPRO
About FOXPRO
Originally released by Fox Software and then acquired by Microsoft, FoxPro was a text-based procedurally oriented programming language and database management system for MS-DOS, Windows, Macintosh, and UNIX. FoxPro's most recent version to be made public was 2.6.
The successor to Foxpro programming, Visual Foxpro, is frequently used for creating applications. Foxpro is more frequently used by programmers to handle databases. Foxpro offers a quick and simple approach to searching databases and finding information.
Why is FOXPRO important?
An object-oriented programming environment with a relational database engine is called Microsoft Visual FoxPro (VFP). VFP may still be downloaded and used to create database applications for desktop, web, and client/server deployments even though Microsoft stopped developing and marketing it in 2007.
Because of its many capabilities, it is also known as a relational database management system. It contains a variety of features that make it very simple to construct and design apps.
Who should take the FOXPRO Exam?
- Developer
- Senior Security Engineer
- ETL Developer
- RPA Developer
FOXPRO Certification Course Outline
- Project Builder
- Table Designer
- Form Wizard and Designer
- Views and Reports
- Procedural Programming
- The Menu Builder
- Overview of Views
- SQL
- FoxPro Report Writer
- Database Normalization
- Data Integrity
- Denormalization
- VFP Database
- Multi-User Issues
- PEM Programming
- Form Designer
- Object Oriented Programming
- Client/Server Applications
- Visual FoxPro and the Internet
- Other Active X Capabilities
- Windows API
- Visual Source Safe