Talk:Lasso (programming language)/Archive 1

Is Lasso a major programming language?

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Hi there. An anonymous user recently added Lasso to Template:Major programming languages, and I don't know enough about it to support or contest this change. It's necessary to be selective in this template to keep its size down.

Some more specific questions might be: How broad is the userbase? Has it been used in some particularly notable applications? I don't see anything in the article regarding this. I will remove it if some compelling justification isn't provided within a few days. Thanks. Deco 23:01, 7 December 2005 (UTC)Reply


FYI, I'm that anonymous person. I wasn't logged in while I wrote. I'll leave it to others to answer your questions. Jussi Hirvi 8 Dec. 2005


Depends on how you define "major". Lasso is used by over 1,000 colleges and universities and more than 15,000 corporations around the world, including Apple, Cisco, Sun, Disney, NASA, the UN, Goodyear, Siemens, and has a large international following.


It would be safe to say that almost wherever you find a group of FileMaker users you will also find Lasso users/developers. I've been working with Lasso for 3 years in a special project with the Ohio Department of Education. It has proven to be the most flexible, user friendly and safest programming language our group has used within the department thus far.

Lasso is very worthy of holding a candle next to ASP (.net), PHP, JSP and CF. While Lasso still has a relatively small developer base, it's implications for data driven web sites are huge and is growing by leaps and bounds every day.

Jtorres 15:49, 8 December 2005 (UTC)Reply


Some examples I have collected include Apple's online Made4Mac guide at http://guide.apple.com/index.lasso, http://www.eurway.com/, http://allaboutbranding.com/, http://www.pprmi.com/ (Prudential), http://plasmadictionary.llnl.gov/ (Lawrence Livermore National Labs), http://thedaily.washington.edu/, http://galvestondailynews.com/, http://www.listsearch.com/, http://www.buywake.com/

I've personally used it for the California State Office of Education as the central info source (demographics, education history, health history, and more) for all foster youth in one of the largest CA counties (and more to come). It's used by county officials, educators, group homes, and others. As a participant in the LassoTalk developers list for six years now, I know that Lasso is used in apps like this for numerous governments, schools, and businesses.

While it began life as primarily a FileMaker thing, Lasso has since version 5 (2001) connected to more databases than most of today's vogue languages/web framework combos, and people I know use it with MySQL 4 & 5, Postgres, MS SQL Server, Oracle. Now at version 8.1 Lasso has been around for 10 years and matches any capability that any of the other major web languages has. Just have a quick gander at this site: http://reference.omnipilot.com/

Hope that helps (Greg Willits)


Lasso is the primary language we use to develop all our sites. I say include it!

Cory


As a developer of the Lasso Language for more than 6 years, Lasso is definitely a very mature and rich middleware application. Lasso has been proven in several businesses that I have worked for over the years. Revival Soy (www.revivalsoy.com) is a medium-sized company with more than 350,000 transactions/sales per year which runs on Lasso. The Conservative Voice (www.theconservativevoice.com) runs on Lasso and generally has 50,000 unique visitors per day. There are many LARGER sites that use lasso, but it's often hard to tell as many developers mask Lasso by just using the .html extension.

In it's early years, Lasso was primarily used as a connector for Filemaker Pro. In fact, Filemaker purchased and licensed the language and called it CDML for Claris Dynamic Markup Language, however Lasso still evolved over the years and has become to this day, a very rich and mature language.

The Lasso Language is used in nearly every industry from real estate, shopping portals, flight booking, blogs and government sectors. Most people that use Lasso talk of it's short learning curve because it's "tags" are in relatively plain english and someone with good HTML experience could pickup the core coding techniques in just a few days.

Lasso primarily connects to MySQL & Filemaker Pro to create web enabled databases applications but has an ODBC connector to connect to other databases such as Oracle, Postgres, MS SQL Server and 4D among others.

Another good point of Lasso is that it has a write once, host anywhere ability as the source code is the same to run on Windows, Red Hat Linux and Mac OS X. (With few exceptions).

Sincerely, Marc Pope


I think longevity should count for something. Lasso has been a shipping commercial product for nearly 18 years. It has been the foundation of my own work for 16 years. It has annual developer conferences. It has a thriving online community. Most of the major web development tools on Macintosh have support for Lasso including BBEdit, Coda, Eclipse, and others. As a back-end product it can sometimes be rendered invisible. My own sites don't necessarily reveal they utilize Lasso on a majority of their pages since they use Lasso to render static HTML pages which are served through a CDN. Like Python and other languages Lasso can also be used for general shell scripting which has no external visibility at all. Fletc3her (talk) 16:47, 28 October 2013 (UTC)Reply

Worthy of Inclusion

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I would include it. It's the leader in connecting to Filemaker databases as well as the best tool for working with MYSQL that I have found. lewissan



It would seem that if PHP is to be included as a "Major Programming Language", one would have to also include Lasso. The two are often compared and contrasted in the same manner Illustrator and Freehand are, with ease of use clearly falling on the side of Lasso. As far as using Lasso for connecting to sophisticated backend databases, Lasso is unrivaled in its simplicity. For a list of hundreds of sites implementing Lasso in its various incarnations, you can visit: http://www.lassodevelopment.com/sites/

-Rick Dwyer



With Lasso being around as long and in some cases even longer than other web development languages, I find it incredible the question is even being asked. Our business uses Lasso for building web products for tht real estate industry. WWW.pprmi.com handles a billion in real estate sales and is ranked in the top 50 real estate companies. www.fivestaragents.com is another using Lasso that we handle that is just behind in those numbers. Other industries also using Lasso includes SpamHaus.org, Apple, NASA, University of Arkansas, Revival Soy and Cambridge Antibody Technology just to name a few.

- Jim Van Heule



Having spent over a decade working with Lasso as my primary major programming language, and writing a book on the language back in 2000 http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1556229615/ there are certainly thousands upon thousands of us who know what Lasso is and use it in our everyday life. Lasso should certainly be included as a "Major Programming Language".


- Duncan Cameron



I started using lasso in 1997 when I got tired of writing cgi scripts to display filemaker data on a web page. I gave up on using php because it was too time consuming to understand. However the ease of use of lasso was amazing and I was able to run the inventory, sales and scheduling for a small advertising business and communicate with sales people in several eastern states. My only background was a fortran 4 course I took in 1969. I write this as an example of lasso's ease of use. Now many years later and many versions of lasso it is used in 5 international science societies for ecommerce, billing, elections, renewals, membership, shipping, reports and a wide variety of administrative tasks all backed by MySQL. These societies all publish journals and lasso serves tens of thousands of articles in pdf form to subscribed members and institutions. I have seen elsewhere on Wikipedia the suggestion that to gauge the popularity of lasso is to google .lasso. For a fact the web pages lasso serves for the science societies are parsed by lasso but have html and htm as extensions so that scheme would not result in a correct answer. Lasso is and has been my major programming language for 16 years and should be included as such.


- Gordon Nord

platforms

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"quote: Lasso Server runs on Mac OS X, Windows 2000, Windows 2003 and Red Hat Linux."

I'm running it on windows XP right now (don't worry, not production ;). Just for making sites locally so i don't have to keep uploading files), and i doubt it only runs on Red Hat's flavor of Linux. Which other platforms does it run on?

- Jonne (can't be arsed to log in)

php bottles of beer

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Link to PHP version of bottles of beer on the wall goes to the wiki PHP page that doesn't mention the bottle of beer algorithm.

Lasso Security

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"It is not appropriate to describe actual security protocols in a public document. Please refer to the LassoSoft website for a further description of the Lasso security system."

That just isn't correct in any way. There's no reason why security details on Lasso's site shouldn't be posted here, and no reason why they should embrace security by obscurity, in a programming language even.Tmcw

GHITS are not reliable source

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See WP:GHITS to understand why this promotional statement has no reliable source TEDickey (talk) 22:38, 26 October 2013 (UTC)Reply

Most language popularity projects on the web use WP:GHITS - either as raw searches on "X programming" or file type as an indicator of language popularity. As these sites (e.g. langpop.com, http://lang-index.sourceforge.net/, etc.) are the basis of Wikipedia articles on popularity (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Search?search=langpop&go=Go), this argument is inherently weak. Suggest redacting this inclusion. --Seanstephens (talk) 01:34, 27 October 2013 (UTC)Reply

Probably not. Most experienced editors appear to frown on using ghits - hence the guideline which I pointed out to you. TEDickey (talk) 01:37, 27 October 2013 (UTC)Reply
Though experience editors may frown WP:DNB, the point stands: popularity indexes use this logic, so it stands to reason - as reliable sources - in this context it is valid. Perhaps this needs to be changed to point at the popularity site data as noted? --Sean Stephens (talk) 02:38, 27 October 2013 (UTC)Reply

misuse of "often"

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Two closely-related examples do not provide a basis for stating that something is done "often". Those may be the only examples from several million possibilities, making the statement non-factual TEDickey (talk) 22:41, 26 October 2013 (UTC)Reply

Now that's a good point. Although they may be "often" compared in the Lasso community, they aren't "often" compared in the media (the basis of most of Wikipedia's knowledge base). Editing... --Seanstephens (talk) 01:36, 27 October 2013 (UTC)Reply
As per note above, with removal of the word "often", other citations can be removed surrounding comparison to other programming languages. One remains viable on http://w3techs.com - it is a list of "Server-side Programming Languages Market Reports", which is by default, a comparison. --Sean Stephens (talk) 03:41, 27 October 2013 (UTC)Reply
The page is pretty clear that they are paid-for products, and as such likely to be less neutral than wanted for a reliable source, and unlikely to be verifiable TEDickey (talk) 21:14, 27 October 2013 (UTC)Reply
Then let's use our classic langpop.com as a reference, if you believe it is critical to have a reference. Ironically, the languages are comparable, based on facts previously stated in the article. Ergo, it's WP:CK. The article is now suffering from WP:DRIVEBYTAGGING and WP:OVERTAGGING. --Sean Stephens (talk) 01:03, 28 October 2013 (UTC)Reply

Notability

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As per the WP:NOTABLY guidelines, enough notable sources exist to clearly show Lasso as notable. These include;

  • November, 2001 - FileMaker Pro Advisor Magazine publishes an article titled Getting Started with Lasso that provides a step-by-step introduction to writing Lasso code for beginners.
  • November, 2000 - Macworld magazine reviews Lasso Studio for Dreamwevaer giving it 4.5 out of 5 mice and citing it as "the easiest way to create a database-driven Web site."
  • April 19, 1999 - Infoworld Magazine cites Lasso with its new XML support.
  • February 1, 1999 - EmediaWeekly Magazine cites new JavaScript module in Lasso.
  • February, 1999 - MacNow Magazine awarded the Lasso Web Data Engine a Reviewers Choice Award.
  • December 14, 1998 - EmediaWeekly Magazine cites Lasso's new support for Microsoft Personal Web Server on Windows 95/98.
  • October 28, 1998 - Microtimes (circ 250,000) provides feature story on how Kaiser Permanente, one of the world's largest HMOs, deploys Lasso and FileMaker throughout their organization.
  • October 19, 1998 - EmediaWeekly Magazine features Lasso 3 with Windows NT and ODBC support.
  • August, 1998 - Macworld magazine awards Lasso 2.5 its highest mouse rating with 4.5 mice.
  • June 15, 1998 - PC Week covers Lasso 2.5 as part of feature on e-commerce and FileMaker Pro.
  • April 15, 1998 - Lasso 2.5 Earns 4 Stars in MacWEEK Review Highlights include the following:

"Lasso's depth and power are astounding." "It offers good security features and an extraordinarily high degree of control over the presentation of information." "The Lasso Server is stable, easy to configure and can handle several dozen simultaneous HTTP requests with ease."

  • June 2, 1997 - Lasso 2.0 cited in MacWEEK "Lasso 2.0 gains Java hooks" article. The complete article is available at: http://www8.zdnet.com/macweek/mw_1122/in_lasso.html 
  • May 22 1997 - MacWEEK cites Blue World and Lasso in Symantec Visual Cafe Pro article. See http://www8.zdnet.com/macweek/mw_1121/in_visual_cafe.html 
  • April 25, 1997 - Lasso is cited in MacWEEK magazine feature story entitled "New Web tools help servers link to legacy data." Regarding online commerce capabilities, Lasso is cited as a "good, low-cost choice... as it provides basic cyberstore templates". MacWEEK also states, "Lasso's strengths are it extensive built-in commerce and e-mail features.". Quoting Dave Parkhurst of Education Technology Inc., MacWEEK states that "...he Dave P. is convinced that Lasso is the most powerful of the products. 'We also had to have a tool that we could support in-house without a team of expensive programmers.' Parkhurst said. 'Lasso again won out.'" 
  • Feb. 14, 1997 - Lasso Wins Macworld Editors' Choice Award and recieves 4 stars. Macworld Magazine concludes " Of the three I tested, Lasso was the fastest.. " and that Lasso offers "...excellent support for advanced FileMaker Pro features, outstanding formatting control, fast performance, and thorough documentation..." Macworld magazine concludes "Lasso is a database-publishing demon".

Question of notability to be removed. --Sean Stephens (talk) 02:06, 27 October 2013 (UTC)Reply

Suggest removal of reference to primary sources as well. Though citations may be currently lacking, no relevant sources list the current primary source (LassoSoft Inc.) directly. --Sean Stephens (talk) 02:12, 27 October 2013 (UTC)Reply
You appear to be quoting from #18. Without reading the original articles which are quoted, it's not possible to filter out advertisements and press-releases, and see which are third-party reviews. TEDickey (talk) 21:56, 27 October 2013 (UTC)Reply
Notability requires only the existence of suitable independent, reliable sources, not their immediate citation - see WP:NRVE. Ergo, the sources are notable, despite your not having read them. Notability is not temporary WP:NOTTEMPORARY. There are also a dozen other notable sources in this post. The journals within which these articles exist are listed on Wikipedia (e.g. MacWEEK/EmediaWeekly, MacWorld, Infoworld, PC Week, etc. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Seanstephens (talkcontribs) 00:40, 28 October 2013 (UTC)Reply

Question of notability to be removed. I've added a few additional sources which document that the language was notable enough to warrant review in a major computer publication, MacWorld, and that it was considered notable enough to be a runner up for an award, losing out to Dreamweaver and tying with the earlier version of Blogger.

Editors' Choice Awards for Internet and Development for Lasso Studio "Editors' Choice Awards: Internet and Development". MacWorld. IDG. Retrieved 28 October 2013.

Concurrent favorable review of Lasso Studio Lasso Studio for Dreamweaver 1.5 Seiter, Charles. "Lasso Studio for Dreamweaver 1.5". MacWorld. IDG. Retrieved 28 October 2013.

Fletc3her (talk) 17:11, 28 October 2013 (UTC)Reply

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As per wikipedia guidelines surrounding Wikipedia:NOT#SOAPBOX, and thanks to User:Eric3K, sections of this article under review as advertisement appear to have been removed/changed. Suggest removal of this issue at the top of the page. --Sean Stephens (talk) 02:09, 27 October 2013 (UTC)Reply

Cleanup Complete

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As per wikipedia guidelines surrounding cleanup, and thanks to User:Eric3K plus others, all sections of this article have been cleaned up. Suggest removal of this issue at the top of the page. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Seanstephens (talkcontribs) 04:22, 27 October 2013 (UTC)Reply

FileMaker "cuts off" Lasso

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From the article: "At around the same time, FileMaker moved functionality that was previously embedded in the web companion and CDML into FileMaker Server. No third party software could 'speak' directly to a FileMaker database, which severed the direct connection of Lasso with FileMaker."

I'm not sure if this is true, and I can find no reference for it. Can anyone comment?--Sean Stephens (talk) 01:05, 28 October 2013 (UTC)Reply


I modified the article noting the release of FileMaker Server Advanced 7 which included FileMaker, Inc.'s new strategy of serving web data through XML, JDBC, and ODBC and to include a reference to Lasso Pro's certification as a product which works with MySQL. I think these references provide a clearer description of how FileMaker's changing web strategy affect middleware products like Lasso.

"FileMaker Server 7 Advanced Now Available". CMO. Retrieved 28 October 2013.

Cook, Brad. "Lasso Pro receives MySQL Network certification". MacWorld. IDG. Retrieved 28 October 2013.

Fletc3her (talk) 17:19, 28 October 2013 (UTC)Reply