I’m sure many die-hard FoxPro developers are curious if Visual FoxPro 9.0 SP 2 will install and run on Windows 10. Well, I wanted to be one of the first to find out,. So, let’s find out First, I installed Windows 10 Preview (64 bit) in a BootCamp partition on my 15” MacBook Pro. (Don’t worry about this Mac stuff, it’s still just Windows running on live hardware, just like if it were a Dell or HP computer). Radio silence mac keygen torrent. That went very smoothly, and I did a full install, blowing away the Windows 8 playground I had been using that partition, instead of updating it from Windows 8 to Windows 10.
Microsoft Visual FoxPro has stopped working When trying to open a program (Investment Account Manager) I receive the warning 'Microsoft Visual FoxPro has stopped working'. This program has worked before on the same computer.
Next, I gently inserted the Visual FoxPro 9 CD that I still have from circa 2004. First, it prompted me to install some “Prerequisites”, which it did with no problems. Next I moved on to the main VFP install, and I took all the defaults, then the CD spun around for a bit, and finally, it gave me a nice message screen stating “Setup is complete” and “There were no errors during setup.” Looking good so far!! Next, I downloaded and installed, and once again, got this nice little affirming message box: Finally, I “installed” the VFP 9 Hotfix 3 for SP2 (i.e. Copied the replacement files to the correct places per the instructions in the readme file in the zip download). We now have a promising Microsoft Visual FoxPro 9.0 entry in the fancy new Windows 10 Start menu: Yes, but does it actually run?? Now, I finally get to find out if we can run the fully patched Microsoft Visual FoxPro 9.0 SP2 Version.7423 on Windows 10.
So, I launch it from the Start menu, and quickly go the Help –> About screen: One small issue with Task Pane If you launch VFP 9 it will initially show the the Task Pane, but you will get a small error in the view area of the Task Pane window. (Don’t worry, I’ll show you how to fix this below.) Class definition MSXML2.DOMDOCUMENT.4.0 is not found. The issue is that Task Pane requires MSXML 4.0 Core Services. If it’s not already installed on your Windows 10 machine, you will get this error reported in the Task Pane app from the VFP IDE. However, this problem is easily fixed You need to download the MSXML 4.0 Core package from: Once, installed, now Task Pane will work properly: Now, let’s run some code Okay, it says the right version number all, but we need run some FoxPro code to make sure this thing actually works So, I just downloaded the from, and ran Thor.app to put VFP 9 on Windows 10 to its first test. Thor uses tons of well-architected FoxPro code to do it’s magic, along with some UI forms, and it makes use of our beloved FoxPro cursors, so I figured this would be a good test. I selected about 10 of my favorite VFPx tools from the Check For Updates form in Thor, and it nicely proceeded to download and install all the tools, and gave this confirming output for each one on the VFP desktop as it did its work: I think we’re good folks! 3ds max render preset file rps free download.
Next, I ran a few of these tools, just to make sure they’d fire off, and they did. I’m pretty certain at this point, that my business apps would work just fine here, if I took the time to finish out this developer setup.
So, I haven’t done any real coding work in the IDE, and I probably won’t any time soon, but from my basic tests in this experiment, it sure appears to me that our old friend Visual FoxPro is ready to continue its legacy of being an awesome development tool, even on Windows 10, and hopefully on Windows 20 and Windows 30 as well. Finally, here’s a peak at the whole IDE running in Windows 10. You can see I docked some windows, and you can see the shading effect that Windows 10 adds around the individual windows. Post navigation. I tested on Windows 10 (WindowsTechnicalPreview-x64-EN-US) several my procedures that are using the old Visul FoxPro 6.0 run time, the procedures work well using the MS treectrl Olecontrol, an ole Zip Unzip ctrl, obviously, accessing big DBFs (more than 1000000 records), connecting with MSSQLs and with IBM DB2 (via ODBC), and so on.
The only problem is using some API of the WININET.dll, sometimes my class lose the return data (from a Foxisapi server), I will investigate better in the future. I tested the procedures on Windows 10 running on a Virtual Machine and quickly (is not the best test). Update to Meiryo font. I tried replacing the Meiryo font via the Code References tool with the Yu Gothic UI font, but that fails to replace as the expression value turns out to be illegal. I also tried changing the font character set to default by the same method, but that failed for the same reason.