Gustav Brock
gustav at cactus.dk
Mon Sep 24 05:37:33 CDT 2012
Hi Arthur But at USD 349 + 499 + 499 => ouch!? /gustav >>> fuller.artful at gmail.com 24-09-12 11:56 >>> First of all, I haven't switched so much as opened a new avenue. I still do occasional work in Access, almost always against a SQL BE. But I am very much intrerested in Alpha Five, for these reasons: -- It offers a whole bunch of web-dev tools, and integrates with Ajax, Javascript, HTML5. ASP.NET, PHP and most anything I can think of. -- It hasn't abandoned the desktop model. At the start of any given project, you can choose to target Desktop or Web; Halfway into a project, you can change horses, as it were. -- There are abundant wizards to perform common tasks; the abundance and power of these make the Access wizards pale in comparison. -- The programming language, Xbasic, is similar to Access VBA but much more powerful. It also offers true object orientation. -- There is a collection of Feature Packs, available at extra cost, which provide additional capabilities. One such is dedicated to Graphics and Charting. There are many more, some created by Alpha and some by third parties. Alpha gets behind any creators of Feature Packs. -- There are dozens of example programs and video tutorials. In this respect, Alpha leaves Access in the dust. -- Whenevr I've asked for help, I have received a response the same day, and sometimes within the hour. -- Once you're ready to turn pro (I'm not there quite yet), Alpha offers a subscription plan that gives you not only updates but any new Feature Pack that may be introduced (not including the third party packs, of course, just the ones created by Alpha). -- Alpha Five has its own data-file format, but the company is well aware that it's going up against Access, and for that reason its next two back ends are Access and SQL Server. Beyond that, it can connect to virtually anything that supports ODBC. Further, you can change back-ends very easily. Not all is a bed of roses. There are a couple of down sides: -- To run a web app requires the Alpha application server, which means that you'll need an additional license enabling you to install the app server on your client's machine. The fee is well within reason, and it allows you to install the server on multiple client locations. But it is a cost to factor in. (The product includes a copy of the app server, so you can develop and test your app, but subsequent client installations require the license.) -- Despite the similarity of programming language, a lot of the event names are slightly different -- it's still pretty obvious which Alpha events correspond to which Access events, but it is a consideration. -- The largest problem is that the web-app server runs only on Windows. So other approaches (say, PHP and/or Javascript + jQuery) may be your only avenue, should you need your app to run on a Linux server. That's a quick summary of my impressions thus far. You can always visit the site (www.alphasoftware.com) and read more about it, and download a trial version if so inclined. On Sun, Sep 23, 2012 at 9:10 PM, Tony Septav <TSeptav at uniserve.com> wrote: > Hey Arthur > > Tell us why you have switched to Alpha Five (or whatever it is called). > And > the benefits you see in using this program. > > > > Thanks > > > > Tony Septav > > Nanaimo, BC > > Canada > -- Arthur