Following the prior discussion about open source development of a report generator, or a fully featured browse class, etc...
This discussion about open source add-on tools for FWH is interesting in view of some springboard projects ripe for open-source development that have been presented here and ignored in the past.
An excellent example is Tsbrowse (for which James Bott cleaned up ver. 6.1 and makes available for download on the Programmers Page of his website). Tsbrowse is a great "springboard" for continuing open source development. It combines Wbrowse, Tcbrowse (much enhanced over the standard!!!) and Tccolumn into a single class with some added features. It works. It is viable. Yet it has been ignored as a platform for robust continuing open source development.
Why?
There are many other examples of open source "springboard" tools that have been offered to the FWH community, but ignored. By "springboard" I mean an FWH class that has been offered that does an important job, that works, but which needs a lot more development to make it fully robust and to keep it up-to-date.
Why are they ignored by the FWH community?
"The World Is Flat" by Thomas Friedman is a best selling book that came out in 2005. It describes how globilization works, including open source development. Compared to the description of robust open source development in Friedman's book, some FWH open source projects seem broken.
Why can't we make open source development work well in add-on FWH tools?
Yet the continued development of Harbour and xHarbour seem to be viable open source projects operating in the way Friedman describes. (But why are there 2 instead of just 1??? Is the original difference in philosophy between Harbour and xHarbour still relevant?)
The "Why" questions probably need answering and solutions found before many will be willing to devote serious time to the kind of open source projects discussed in the prior thread. And there are viable "springboards" already available for an open source report generator, an ad-hoc browse builder, an adhoc query generator, etc., if it would be worthwhile for their authors to contribute them.
However, I can fully understand why Antonio may not wish to get involved in these open source add-on projects because he has his hands full concentrating on building and maintaining the multiple underlying platforms that he provides. So I guess this is mainly a discussion for the rest of us.
Just my two cents. - Roger