On Sat 25 Jul 2020 at 14:45:58 (-0400), Paul M Foster wrote: > On Sat, Jul 25, 2020 at 12:38:10PM -0500, Richard Owlett wrote: > > > Back in 70's/80's I wrote programs as part of routine job duties. > > {8080/8085 assembler, dBase and Paradox} > > Neither I, nor my employers, classed me as a "programmer". > > I was "Senior Engineering Tech" or "Junior Engineer". > > IOW, I was not in abject *AWE* of computers. *ROFL* > > > > Right now I'm working on a personal project. > > INPUT: How much of what did I eat? > > OUTPUT: How much [cal/protein/fiber] did I eat? > > > > SQL {and variants} seen to dominate all else. > > IIRC, dBase was simpler. > > > > What current FOSS system might I be comfortable with? > > > I used dBase (FoxPro) and Paradox decades ago. My advice: learn SQL and > select the DBMS of your choice. SQLite3, PostgreSQL, MySQL. For > portability and low traffic, I'd select SQLite3.
I think I indirectly made that suggestion in this thread https://lists.debian.org/debian-user/2018/07/msg00057.html which referred back to the OP's own thread https://lists.debian.org/debian-user/2018/06/msg00757.html > Gone are the days of xBase and the like. SQL is the lingua franca for > all modern database systems. And SQLite3 has bindings for most modern > languages. > > Since you probably would like an application with a nice interface One can never be sure: the OP seems pretty fearless when it comes to CLIs. > (curses, GUI, web), I'd suggest PHP. The platform for your interface is > in the server and the browser; you just have to write some HTML, which > is pretty easy. Otherwise, you're looking at fiddly code with GTK or QT > (or ncurses). Cheers, David.