
I’m going to name this HI.PRG, and I’m going to call a function hic from the dBase script.

So as a very basic example of this, let’s make a simple. So far I’ve only written a few things to call the video bios from Microsoft C. So you can be free to write all kinds of strange and interesting things. Now what’s really cool about Clipper is that, not only could it compile the dBase PRG files, but you could also link in code from MASM (The Microsoft Assembler), and Microsoft C (Other C compilers can work too, but MS C works best, as Clipper seems to have been written in MSC.). PRG file, it could still access the same database files, that you had created in dBase III, or you could even create your own on the fly within the. For some reason the people behind dBase were slow to the market, so Nantucket Corporation, arrived with Clipper, a superset of the dBase language, that could translate the dBase scripts into code for a p-code interpreter (it’s the same thing as a virtual machine, like Sun’s java, or z-machine from Infocom). PRG script files for dBase, and compiling them with a 3rd party compiler. However back then, the big deal was taking your. PRG files which were human readable, and quite capable of doing all kinds of fun things.Īs people’s level of complexity grew with dBase, people started to deploy it as an application, which in this day in age isn’t that unheard of, it happens today in the form of the Access 2007 runtime. And you could save your scripts into these.

The cool thing about dBase was that you could program it, and the syntax was very easy to pick up, compared to SQL. But this was the wonderful world of dBase, a simple to use database utility that set the world on fire back in the CP/M, MS-DOS days.

I’m sure most people have never heard, or seen the thing.
