Hi guys, I have wondered this question for a very long time. About the Progress and Enterprise licenses.What differences does Progress and Enterprise license number have?
For example, if customer has User Limit of Client Networking License 15, User Limit of Enterprise Licence 17 and in the database management max users in tools 30 users and in enterprise 37 users - and finally - 20 Users mentioned at Enterprise-software.Which of these numbers tells how many users can be signed in at Enterprise at the same time?Best, Katriina. I followed a licensing presentation at a PugChallenge a couple of years ago. The only lesson I learned was that licensing is so complex Progress has a department to assist you in calculating this and other licensing questions.I gave up trying to calculate number of users after an advice I gave to a customer they needed 100 users extra and Progress salesrep threw in some agent licenses, totally contradicting what I had told the customer.AFAIK -n is a technical parameter that has almost no relation to licensing. A single named user can consume multiple database connections, on the other hand if your 15 named users are at home no one else can use their connection.You should get some info about 'named users', 'registered client', 'agents' etc. But I don't have the link to that at hand.
Google Developer License
I guess there will be some documents on the partner site that can help. Ask your salesrep.Other people may be able to provide a better answer but they will need.
The version of OpenEdge. the exact name of the license (named user/register client/.). and probably some info about the types of users, frequency of use. N is for managing connection count, not user count. The two are often different.Most 10.x products are licensed by named user or registered client. Named users can be on any device, but only the named individuals are licensed. Registered client is based on the device, e.g., like a shop floor terminal where 15 different people might log in.
The two cannot be mixed. In both cases one user can have multiple sessions on the same device and only count as one user.Pre 10.x most licenses were concurrent user, i.e., people simultaneously accessing the DB. Some people have carried over concurrent user licensing to 10 and 11. Concurrent user licenses are more expensive than named user and registered client.Generally, batch processes are not counted toward user counts unless they outnumber the human users.Some products also have agent licenses and CPU licenses.There is a Policy Guide which goes over this in detail if you can leverage one out of your salesperson's hands.
Real Estate Developer License
OpenEdge 12.1/ September 9, 2019; 15 days ago ( 2019-09-09)(see below)ProprietaryWebsiteOpenEdge Advanced Business Language, or OpenEdge ABL for short, is a business application development language created and maintained by (PSC). The language, typically classified as a, uses an English-like syntax to simplify software development. The language was called PROGRESS or Progress 4GL up until version 9, but in 2006 changed the name to OpenEdge Advanced Business Language (OpenEdge ABL) in order to overcome a presumed industry perception that 4GLs were less capable than other languages. A subset of the language, called SpeedScript, is used in the development of web applications.OpenEdge ABL helps developers to develop applications optionally using its own integrated. These applications are portable across computing systems and allow access to various popular data sources without having to learn the underlying methods. This means that the of these products can be unaware of the underlying architecture.By combining a fourth generation language and relational database, OpenEdge ABL allows the use of the (RAD) model for developing software.
Openedge Support
A programmer and even end users can do using the integrated and GUI tools of the development environment. Contents.History The original Progress 4GL was designed (in 1981) as an architecture independent language and integrated database system that could be used by non-experts to develop business applications by people who were not computer scientists but were knowledgeable in their business domain. At the time, business applications were often written in COBOL (for machines like corporate IBM mainframes) and sometimes in C (for departmental minicomputers running the UNIX operating system). When the IBM PC became popular, there developed a need for business software that could be used on those and other inexpensive computers. The Progress system was created to be used on both IBM PC machines running DOS and on a variety of computers that could run UNIX.Syntax and semantics Progress ABL is a strongly typed, late-bound,.
Although initially designed as a procedural language, starting with version 10.1 it was enhanced with object-oriented grammar elements, which can be mixed with the original procedural style. A block of code may have a transaction scoped to it, in which case database changes will be committed when it completes. An error raised within such a block will undo these changes.
These defaults may be overridden by the programmer.Simple programs run without a Graphical User Interface, but there is syntax to create one programatically; or programmers can use the provided tools to build one.Examples Hello World.