On 06/28/2013 11:15 AM, Tracy Pearson wrote:
Ted Roche wrote on 2013-06-28:
On Fri, Jun 28, 2013 at 12:53 PM, Jeff Johnson <[email protected]> wrote:
I can't imagine how what I am doing could shut down the refresh -
including the F5 key; but that is the case. That is the only problem,
the
refresh.
When you say, "the refresh" do you mean hitting the F5 key or selecting
refresh in Internet Explorer while it is on the Google Calendar page?
When you are running the Google Calendar in a browser window, you are
hosting a great big Javascript application within the browser. It's worth
poking around on the interface to see if the user configuration has
somehow locked it. For example, there's an "Offline" option under the
settings menu.
Clicking on the word "Calendar" in my version causes the calendar to
reload.
This is wild speculation on my part... but I wonder if you are running
into
some processing shortcut where the browser is testing to see if the page
has changed and the way it is asking the server is failing to note that
the
calendar has been updated by another process.
First, I'd test to see if it happened in another browser. On this
machine,
or on another one.
Then, I'd test to see if I could get the refresh to work if I closed and
opened the browser, or cleared the cache and reopened that page.
Jeff,
Additionally, which IE is the user using. The App (started from the start
screen) or the Program?
The App has the Address bar at the bottom. It hides until a user right
clicks the interface.
Tracy Pearson
PowerChurch Software
The Python application is being run using the VFP RUN command. I will
have to ask him which browser he is using.
Thanks,
Jeff
---------------
Jeff Johnson
[email protected]
(623) 582-0323
www.san-dc.com
www.arelationshipmanager.com
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