apparently there are even some benefits to adopting AppleScript and, depending on OSA integration, which I assume is robust in this case, several other cross-platform scripting languages can also be used in conjunction. For more information, and a complete how-to, see the upcoming month's MacTech magazine, a spiral-bound preliminary draft of which was being distributed in the Microsoft booth at Macworld. It looked really comprehensive to me. <shrug>
> on 1/19/07 9:25 AM, John Allen stated: > > > Yes, this is definitely the case. At MacWorld they were even > > actively pointing people in how they can migrate their existing code > > (Applescript mainly). > > So basically my MS Word documents with macros will no longer be > cross-platform. I am assuming the WINDOWS version will continue with VB... > > This is a real drag... > > Don Wieland > DW DATA CONCEPTS > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > > Direct Line - (714) 389-4026 > Fax - (714) 389-4027 > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > http://www.dwdataconcepts.com > > Integrated data solutions to fit your business needs. > > APPOINTMENT 1.0v7 - Add powerful scheduling to your database system. > > http://www.appointment10.com/ > > -- TTFN, tah tah for now, Naomi Pearce Pearce Communications 510/528-0824 **************************************************************** Status: What a wild Macworld Expo. Recovering nicely, thanks. ****************************************************************
