Yes, if installed using Wine.
You have to buy it. The original FoxPro software was purchased by Microsoft, and is now known as Visual FoxPro. The current and final version of this software is version 9.0. You can buy it online from numerous retailers. If this is for home or educational use, you can often buy much discounted versions of Microsoft software. Otherwise, this is expensive, although well worth the money if you're a DB programmer or need to work with one of the many accounting and other systems written in it.
Windows programs, including those written in Visual Basic, do not run natively on Linux. Most Visual Basic programs should be usable if Wine is installed.
None what-so-ever. Halo was developed with Microsoft. So Linux will not work with it.
No. It wouldn't have any use even if it did.
It must be some of your parameters or file in foxpro work incorrectly. Make use of tool below.
Linux already is a serious competitor to Windows, especially in markets outside of the desktop. Linux fully dominates over Windows on servers, mobile, routers, embedded, and supercomputing markets. Some are even believing Linux is fast becoming the industry standard operating system in these markets because of how readily it can be made to work. On the desktop, Linux is alsoa threat to Windows market share, by Microsoft's own admission. Look up the Halloween Documents, which are a series of leaked memos by someone high up in Microsoft addressing Linux as Microsoft's largest credible threat.
i love linux, but company's people all use windows. so i need use xp
That would depend on the "other software". It works great on Linux and Microsoft operating systems.
4
I think you mean how do you work visual basic. Anyways, it is a programming language developed by Microsoft using a type of basic language. I would go to a site that will teach you vb (visual basic)
In FoxPro, the work area refers to the memory space where data from tables are accessed and manipulated. Each work area corresponds to a table or cursor and allows developers to work with multiple tables or cursors simultaneously within the same program. Work areas are identified by numeric values starting from 1.
I you are taliking about word editing you can do that in a program called Libreoffice. If you have ever used Openoffice it is very similar, and you can earn your master's degree online because anything that works in your web browser in windows will work in Linux. Libreoffice can aslo save in Microsoft Word format so that your teachers do not have to know you are not using Microsoft Word.