On 08/28/2014 04:14 PM, Tobias Boege wrote:
On Thu, 28 Aug 2014, Kevin Fishburne wrote:
When you store data files in the project directory and compile the
program those files are contained within the resulting .gambas
executable. From within the program they can be accessed as though they
were i
On Thu, 28 Aug 2014, Beno?t Minisini wrote:
> Le 28/08/2014 22:14, Tobias Boege a ?crit :
> > PS: Or what Benoit said... BTW: is the .gambas file in a Gambas-specific
> > archive format?
> >
>
> Yes. Why?
>
I thought about a way to unpack the archive. gba3 -x didn't come to my mind.
Before
Le 28/08/2014 22:14, Tobias Boege a écrit :
> PS: Or what Benoit said... BTW: is the .gambas file in a Gambas-specific
> archive format?
>
Yes. Why?
--
Benoît Minisini
--
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Video for Nerds. Stuff that
On Thu, 28 Aug 2014, Kevin Fishburne wrote:
> When you store data files in the project directory and compile the
> program those files are contained within the resulting .gambas
> executable. From within the program they can be accessed as though they
> were in the current directory. Is it possi
Le 28/08/2014 21:53, Kevin Fishburne a écrit :
> When you store data files in the project directory and compile the
> program those files are contained within the resulting .gambas
> executable. From within the program they can be accessed as though they
> were in the current directory. Is it possi
When you store data files in the project directory and compile the
program those files are contained within the resulting .gambas
executable. From within the program they can be accessed as though they
were in the current directory. Is it possible to access (read only)
those files using a comma
> Because you must to set explicitelly the background color.
>
> Picture =new picture(w,h,gb.transparent)
>
Ummm... no. There argument is boolean type for mask, and it doesn't change
the issue.
Even if you do it correctly; PictureBox1.Picture.Fill(Color.White) , it
doesn't fix the limitation Beno
Because you must to set explicitelly the background color.
Picture =new picture(w,h,gb.transparent)
Le 28 août 2014 16:40, "Jussi Lahtinen" a écrit :
> > > It seems picture of PictureBox doesn't like to be drew on. Not sure
> why,
> >
> > The Picture property is NULL by default: it just owns a
> > It seems picture of PictureBox doesn't like to be drew on. Not sure why,
>
> The Picture property is NULL by default: it just owns a reference to a
> Picture object you must create by yourself!
>
I noticed that and it wasn't the problem. This was the code I tried:
PictureBox1.Picture = New Pi
Le 28/08/2014 13:55, Jussi Lahtinen a écrit :
> It seems picture of PictureBox doesn't like to be drew on. Not sure why,
The Picture property is NULL by default: it just owns a reference to a
Picture object you must create by yourself!
--
Benoît Minisini
---
It seems picture of PictureBox doesn't like to be drew on. Not sure why,
but we have DrawingArea for that purpose... Anyway, here is proper way
(this didn't work?):
Dim tmp As New Picture(DrawingArea1.Width, DrawingArea1.Height)
If Not bPrinter Then
Draw.Begin(tmp)
Draw.Clear
mo
Hi Jussi,
Draw.Begin(PictureBox1) -> Not a printable object
Draw.Begin(PictureBox1.Picture) -> Null Object
Any idea?
Thanks for reply.
--
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