What is Sanscript?
Northwoods Sanscript® programming environment
is a visual dataflow programming language and development environment.
Sanscript literally allows you to draw your application, not code
it. You drag a component to the canvas, and wire it to the other components in
the diagram. Then you hit the run button. No compile, no link, none of that.
Just Run.
With Truly Visual® components
Sanscript can script applications through cabinets of visual components.
Sanscript comes with a built in cabinet of Math, List, File I/O, Directory,
Windows Registry operations. We have a selection of cabinets
that can be downloaded and imported into Sanscript.
Who is it for?
Anyone who needs to write a program. Sanscript is for professionals that aren't
programmers, but need to throw a script together now and then to get their job
done. It will also impress professional programmers with its power and
capabilities. System managers and IS pros will appreciate its easy reuse
that makes the second and third programs faster and easier as you build up your
own library of visual components.
See what our customers are saying.
Visual cabinets are most easily created by importing type libraries from any
application that exposes a Microsoft Object Model (also known as COM or OLE
Automation). This is the primary additional feature in Sanscript Pro. The
other differences are listed in the Online Tour.
If you'd like to see more first, you can learn more in our Online
Tour.
Current Status
Sanscript Pro, which was previously priced at $129, is now available free.
It's the coolest programming tool you'll ever see. Around here when we want to
get something done quickly, we use Sanscript.
If you are interested in purchase a license to the source code for your own
project, contact us here.
Our previous OEMs
Sanscript has been licensed by Compaq and Informix. Compaq included it as part
of the Compaq Batch Scheduler
product. In this product, it was used a visual replacement for a .BAT or
Windows script (wsh) file.
The Sanscript dataflow technology was also the front end to the Informix
Formation product, which was a data warehouse extraction and transformation
tool.
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