On 2016-10-24 16:25, Joseph Sinclair wrote:
C/C++ language-specific groups seem to have mostly evaporated in the
past decade or so as other languages have become more popular in
general.
Most of the sites I used to hang out on are no longer functioning.
http://www.cprogramming.com/ is still running, and is a good starting point.

Nice site!

Last I heard the #C channel on freenode IRC was still useable, but I
can't check that directly at the moment.
StackOverflow is decent when you have reasonably specific questions,
but it can be a bit of effort to wade through the voluminous content
to find what you want.

For your specific project, there are some domain-specific communities
that might offer pointers, suggestions, and code examples:
https://harbour.github.io/  An implementation of the Clipper system
which compiles xBase code and supports multiple backends including
dbf.
http://www.clicketyclick.dk/databases/xbase/format/index.html  The dbf
file format documentation.
https://sourceforge.net/projects/dbase/  An existing (very small,
possibly abandoned) dbf file library written in C with some C++
wrappers.
https://sourceforge.net/projects/xdb/  Another (definitely abandoned)
xBase library in C++

Hopefully those help.

Joseph,

You appear to be someone who was an xBase developer in another lifetime. I started programming using dBase II in the mid 80's. I ended my xBase time in 2000 and was using VFP 6 at the time. I think VFP was the best file server database engine and dev tool and probably still is. I recall FoxBase+ being rated as having the best data engine in the late 80's.

VFP's data engine would allow it to scale to, I would guess, 1000's of users. It was file server and was in a great niche - RAD tool for small business.

I worked for a manufacturing company in the mid 90's that was using FoxPro Dos to run their business. I think we had just shy of 200 users. This was a manufacturing company so their needs were very complex.

I think there is a niche that is going under served by the death of VFP. I believe the death of VFP was due to it being purchased by Microsoft. At the time I believed M$ bought VFP to acquire the data engine for MS-Access. It appears that was not the case. It is unclear to me why M$ bought Fox.

It would be nice if there was an open source project to build a VFP that could run on Linux, Windows, and Mac. Not a VFP that does all things for all people. No web building tools just a simple RAD file server DB tool that developers could use to create small business applications.

Thank you for the references and the walk down memory lane!!

Keith


On 10/23/2016 08:20 AM, Keith Smith wrote:

Hi,

Looking for suggestions C/C++ user group / mailing list.

I have very little experience with C and would like to create some libraries for managing dBase files (.dbf).

Thank you in advance!!

Keith
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