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Paradox (database)

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Paradox is a relational database management system currently published by Corel Corporation. It was originally designed for DOS but a Windows version was released by Borland in 1992.

Paradox for DOS

Paradox for DOS was a relational database management system originally released by Ansa-Software. In September 1987, Borland purchased Ansa-Software, including their Paradox/DOS 2.0 software. Notable classic versions were 3.5 and 4.5. Versions up to 3.5 were evolutions from 1.0. Version 4.0 and 4.5 were retooled in the Borland C++ windowing toolkit and used a different extended memory access scheme.

Paradox/DOS was a successful DOS-based database of the late eighties and early nineties. At that time, dBase and its xBase clones (Foxpro, dbFast, Clipper programming language, dbXL) had the lion's share of the market. Other notable competitors were Clarion, DataEase, [[R:Base]], Dataflex, MDBS Knowledgeman.

The features that distinguished Paradox/DOS were:

Paradox for Windows

Paradox for Windows was a distinctly different product produced by a different team of programmers. Borland had, by this time, acquired Ashton-Tate and was preoccupied with proving the worth of the Object-Oriented Programming paradigm, by designing Paradox/Windows and dBase/Windows in such a way that both would share a common database engine called the Borland IDAPI engine. This shift in focus caused delivery datelines for Paradox/Windows and dBase/Windows to be significantly delayed, allowing Microsoft to score well with a pre-Christmas release of their Microsoft Access database program. Microsoft Access was sold for a fraction of the price of Paradox/Windows and bundled with Word, Excel and PowerPoint in Microsoft Office Professional. Furthermore, Access performance was good thanks to team contributions from FoxPro programmers.

Corel Paradox

Corel acquired certain rights to develop and market Paradox in the mid-90's and released Corel Paradox 8 in 1997. It also bundled Paradox in the professional version of its WordPerfect Office suite. It has released versions 9, 10, 11, 12 and the latest version Office X3 since then.

Paradox Users

There is a strong Paradox user base, mainly centered around www.thedbcommunity.com[link] and its associated newsgroups. Many feel let down by Borland and Corel because they believe that Paradox is superior to all the other desktop DBMS's around. Although there are many fans of ObjectPAL, the programming language for Paradox/Windows, PAL/DOS scripts could not easily be migrated; the object and event models were completely different forcing developers using PAL to completely rewrite their database applications.

See also

 


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