I'd like to make an installation package to install a gambas program on a
machine that does not have gambas. I tried doing it clicking on
Project -> Make -> Installation package.
After presenting some questions, it runs and creates 22 files (regular,
.gz, dsc and deb files). Four of them a *.deb fi
2017-07-04 11:29 GMT-04:30 Fernando Cabral :
> Well, I found a very easy way to do it:
>
>
> *Dim Wordlist as string []*
>
> *Wordlist = Split(File.Load("strings.txt"), "\n")*
> It seems it can't be easier, can it?
>
wow, very easy.. good made it
>
>
>
>
> 2017-07-04 12:06 GMT-03:00 Fernando Cab
I'd like to display text highlights like bold and italics. Can I do it
using TextArea? If yes, how?
If I can't which resource should I use?
Regards
- fernando
--
Fernando Cabral
Blogue: http://fernandocabral.org
Twitter: http://twitter.com/fjcabral
e-mail: fernandojosecab...@gmail.com
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http://gambaswiki.org/bugtracker/edit?object=BUG.1102&from=L21haW4-
Comment #4 by PICCORO LENZ MCKAY:
some info related to this issue too:
https://github.com/FreeTDS/freetds/issues/131#issuecomment-313166673 but i cant
understand in total that freddy77 said!
-
http://gambaswiki.org/bugtracker/edit?object=BUG.1113&from=L21haW4-
Comment #15 by PICCORO LENZ MCKAY:
some info from freetds git repo:
https://github.com/FreeTDS/freetds/issues/131#issuecomment-313166673
are that info usefully? i cannot understant that freddy77 said!
Tobi wrote:
> n your mail I can see three distinct attempts at writing down a
> negative character class: [^[:alpha:], [^[alpha]], and [^[:alpha]],
> but the correct syntax is
>
> [[:^alpha:]]
>
> You want to check this first.
Right again, Tobi. I can't understand how I missed this. Thank you.
bb wrote:
>I think you might find that the last character of indesejaveis.txt is a \n
(as is the case for many, many > files) so in actual fact your original
split did exactly what it was supposed to do.
>
> And your work around is correct. Although it is not actually a work
around it is a very
>
On Tue, 04 Jul 2017, Fernando Cabral wrote:
> I have been trying something like *poder[^[:alpha:]* so I could find the
> word "poder " ("poder" followed by an space) but not "poderão" ("ã" being
> an alpha character in Portuguese.)
>
> In English it could be like finding "power" but not "powerle