I agree as I also already suggested to search the help and not the internet.
The help is available in the simplest way by starting VFP and pressing F1 at any moment within VFP (F1 also at least once was a standard for any application).
It's also in the internet and of course you also find a lot more than the help online. To get the basics you need, the help is really a good starting point for everything, as it's a 100% complete and very good reference, but also has many How To sections explaining more than just one class or command but whole topics, there are even some walktroughs.
I'm biased to say tek-tips is another great resource, I'm aware there are other forums as well, and then there is
Right in this moment it's not available and errors with "Service Unavailable", but it will get up again, I'm sure. And there are a few more sites and blogs and persons, but what do I say to stress the point that the help file is your friend? I just mention all this as you surely find useful info and more results in the web, but learning concepts the help is perhaps the best starting point. If you want to have a roundabout approach of learning VFP a better approach is reading a book that is like a roundtrip of the "house" that VFP is, and there are many of Hentzenwerke. There are also tips books that show you some corners of the house. So not all books are for all cases, but the title and abstract of a book should tell you.
It's - as you know - also important to have a forum to be able to ask questions and get interactive. But we can't assume in every answer that anything related to it also needs to be exlplained or is so basic that we even don't consider it unknown. What isn't covered should be looked up and you have the full documentation in the help for that matter.
And then there's the whole VFPX project over at GitHub, including, to close this circle again, an extended and latest VFP help file at
If you search your installed help file for "VFPX" and don't find
this self-referential help topic and don't find the VFPX logo in every help page footer then you don't have updated VFP9s own help file to this latest version, which has some corrections, some extensions, some legacy FoxPro help topics and, well, is actively maintained on GitHub with Francis Faure being the project owner. If you speak French, a whole site in French about FoxPro is
just for reference of what Francis Faure also does about FoxPro.
I can also completely understand when you feel torn apart about asking or not, as it reduces engagement with threads that become very long, but as also often said, you can start as mana parallel threads and the more direct a question about solution or sample code is related to a thread, the more it belongs into the same, there's no hurdle to also spark a new question and thread or a set of threads to get explained what we may consider common knowledge also from the point of view you already know old FoxPro versions (and not dBase or Clipper, but FoxPro). Again, don't feel discouraged to ask when we ask you to stop a thread, this is not asking you to stop using the forum to ask more. But also don't expect a post to answer everything you might or might not know and is related to a solution.
When you're using a cooking forum it's also assumed you know basics or you wouldn't really have interest in the cooking forum. And when you ask for recipes they use many standard terms without explaining them. Of course they don't. They also may refer you to glossary or basic books, which compares to the help in case of VFP, and the help is so much more than just a glossary of VFP, it's very complete.
Chriss