yes it is a rdbms
they are programs from different manufacturers, dbase was from Ashton tate and foxpro was from fox something, i don't remember very well but the dbase III was totally compatible with the foxplus version of foxpro ( of course there were little differences)
Yes it is.
discuss database and field functions
They r two types 1)create package command 2)create package body command
On File choose New, a window will appear and ask you for New Project or Database. Choose Database and click New File. It will then ask you to give a database name. After your Database is made, you can now add tables.
every rdbms is a dbms.as of a standard there is a criteria for any prog. lang. to become rdbms. this is defined in codds 12 rules. this all together if satisfied then any prog lang can be said to be a rdbms. but in practice we come across many examples where a prog lang is not rdbms but still provide relational database very often. ex foxpro is not rdbms because it does not satisfy one of the codds 12 rule i.e. of defining a foreign key. in foxpro you cannot define a foreign key. but since it has tables in it and can provide relations we can term foxpro as pseudo rdbms(partial rdbms)..........
FoxPro 2 is text base procedurally-oriented programming language and DBMS. It does not support relationships between tables, it is not considered RDBMS. It has not transactional processing. But Visual FoxPro is an extension of FoxPro2 with supporting SQL query and data manipulation. While oracle is RDBMS.
The name of few DBMS are FOXPRO, MS-ACCESS, SQL Server, My SQL, ORACLE, etc.
how to learn foxpro
Parts of Visual FoxPro
Visual FoxPro was created in 1984.
Sorting in FoxPro changes the physical record position in the table. Records can also be rearranged in FoxPro by indexing.
what is rdbms and its application
difference between oracle and foxpro
The conditional statement in foxpro is DID YOU GET IT
insufficient memory
Foxpro is a database software and nobody is using it now a days. Previously Foxpro was called ad dBase run on MS-DOS.