I have had some experience with dBase III in late 1980s, but switched to FoxBASE in 1990, and has been FoxPro programmer ever since - until last year, where I, on my new job, have to work in VFP and Visual dBase Plus.
What can I tell? dBase is still dBase (albeit Visual), not much different in the syntax from it's ancestor, and not much added functionality either. The same goes for the IDE: aside from visual design capability (similar to that of VB ver. 1.0) - that same XBase look and feel of the 1980s.
At the same time, VFP went so far ahead in all the aspects mentioned, that, after a decade of working in VFPs IDE I was able to navigate and design forms and whatnot in VS 2003/05/08 IDE without any big trouble - which may be understandable, given that both IDE were designed by the same company. That, and the wealth of features and built-in functionality present in VFP, let alone the latter's set of built-in DDL, DML and T-SQL commands, is by long, long miles ahead of all its other xBase "siblings" that are still "alive", and VDB is no exception.
It's a huge loss for the S/W developers community that MS decided to discontinue VFP, decision based totally on monetary basis (profitability). VFP will still be around for a long while, but without the financial strength that MS have had provided - it will eventually slid to the sideways and diminish to a kind of exibit item for a "kunsthaus" so to speak... Very sad!
Now, as for the claims that dBase is 32-bit now - I am yet to see that. And, considering that we are at the beginning of the transition from 32- to the 64-bit OS, we're all yet to see if the dBase, Inc. would be capable of keeping up with this transition.
Let's wait and see!
Regards,
Ilya