The two new products from AshtonTate Corp turn out to be dBase Professional Compiler and Step IVward, both aimed at applications and add-on developers planning to use the forthcoming dBase IV, which is on target for September 30 delivery: the first is a native code compiler designed for ease of use and high performance, set […]
The two new products from AshtonTate Corp turn out to be dBase Professional Compiler and Step IVward, both aimed at applications and add-on developers planning to use the forthcoming dBase IV, which is on target for September 30 delivery: the first is a native code compiler designed for ease of use and high performance, set for first quarter 1989; and Step IVward is a dBase-dialect code converter designed to take code written using Clipper, FoxBase and Quicksilver, and translate it into executable dBase IV code and costs $90, $10 for users of the three alien products who submit the first page of the documentation from their dBase-dialect products to Ashton-Tate; it is due to ship in the fourth quarter 1988.