-Original Message-
>From: Brian Yennie <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
\>
>This is all very clever (seriously!), but I think this thread is
>simply talking about two different things. It is one thing to maintain
>your own sorting information in arrays. It's another to pull the data
>out of arrays
This is all very clever (seriously!), but I think this thread is
simply talking about two different things. It is one thing to maintain
your own sorting information in arrays. It's another to pull the data
out of arrays, then sort it. But it's another entirely to have
sortable array. When y
-Original Message-
>From: David Bovill <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Mark - looking at your script this is NOT doing what we need. It is not
>sorting the keys - it is simply sorting a list, which happens to be inside
>of an array. By that I mean nothing is actually happening to the array - you
>simp
On Sep 14, 2008, at 9:00 PM, Jim Sims wrote:
I'm playing with Rev CGI, creating membership forms with name-email-
tele-etc.
Rev writes to a master list (a text file on the server) and saves
the data in a tab
delimited list.
Never mind ;-)
Got it figured it out now.
sims
__
James Hurley wrote:
> This is a new area for me, but I'm sure it is a common task for many of
> you.
>
> I have a mail merge job for a local election.
>
> I have generated all the data in RR for the letter, i.e. the label and
> the greeting for the letter from the election data base. (This greeti
Yes, don't post to the list... ;-)
I got several of these too, Richmond...
Think it's just some sort of 'out of office' automatic reply email from
someone on this list...
Mark
on 9/14/08 12:42 PM, Richmond Mathewson at [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I have recently posted 2 messages to this Use-Li
I have recently posted 2 messages to this Use-List and, about 60-90 minutes
later recieved a copy of the message under the heading:
Benachrichtung zum Übermittlungsstatus (Fehlgeschlagen)
from
"[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
with 2 attachments; one .TXT and one .EML
they are both:
Dies ist eine automati
Mark you lost me on this thread somewhere:
2008/9/14 Mark Brownell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> We can have both worlds right now. If you need sorted and unsorted keys &
> order of entry per dimensional layer or not all you need do is add layer [9]
> assuming you will never need layer 9.
Sorry what's
I'm playing with Rev CGI, creating membership forms with name-email-
tele-etc.
Rev writes to a master list (a text file on the server) and saves the
data in a tab
delimited list.
Each has an individual ID number and I include that in the value of a
checkbox
that I want to use to delete memb
On Sun, 14 Sep 2008 01:09:18, "Chipp Walters" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote
Peter,
You might want to try a nifty tool I've worked on to help make
3.0's script
editor work better for me.
altXray is a plugin for Rev 3.0. It works best with altPlugin Toolbar.
http://www.altuit.com/webs/altuit2/alt
Dear William,
Please go to revOnline and download "Buzz" (under 'Richmond');
something to play with at least!
Why the 'QT'in your question title?
sincerely, Richmond Mathewson
A Thorn in the flesh is better than a failed Systems De
>From: Mark Wieder <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
...
>Maybe a property of arrays would do this:
>
>set the sortorder of theDataA to empty -- unsorted, fastest
>set the sortorder of theDataA to "first input" -- FIFO
>set the sortorder of theDataA to "last input" -- LFIFO
>set the sortorder of theDataA to "alp
2008/9/14 Richard Gaskin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>
> put tMyData[5] into tMySnippetA
> put tMySnippetA["title"]
> put tMySnippetA["body"]
>
> Are there cases where putting your arrays inside of ordinal wrapper arrays
> would be problematic?
Most of the time I don't want the complexity - the order
On Sat, 13 Sep 2008 17:07:24, "J. Landman Gay"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Peter Brigham wrote:
Well, my personal frontscript only has handlers for suspend,
resume, and
controlkeydown messages, there are no backscripts, and I haven't
tweaked
the rev IDE scripts at all. The only stack in
Hi there,
I am making a simple excercise for my litte son of 4 years of age.
I got 6 images that can be dragged around the screen (one by one).
He must put them in the right place but on error I want the images to change
place.
Do I need to code the position of the images on every error or can thi
Ken-
Saturday, September 13, 2008, 9:20:51 PM, you wrote:
Thank you. I may have to have this framed.
> What your code has done is to create a data link between Excel and the text
> file so that whenever the text file is changed, you can switch to that
> workbook and do a "refresh" and it will re
Ken-
Saturday, September 13, 2008, 10:25:58 PM, you wrote:
> "What benefit is it to the Rev developer (not the engine) to have the keys
> NOT sorted?"
I agree. While I don't think it's a traditional role of arrays to have
their keys sorted and hash tables have their own internal key sorting,
I t
Mark-
Thanks for doing the timing on this. I believe it's not just
multidimensional arrays that are faster now, but a part of the new
engine changes is that arrays with solely numeric indices are treated
differently from associative arrays. They're about as close to the
metal as you can get and so
This is a new area for me, but I'm sure it is a common task for many
of you.
I have a mail merge job for a local election.
I have generated all the data in RR for the letter, i.e. the label
and the greeting for the letter from the election data base. (This
greeting is a little complicated
Thanks for the big welcome and all your input, Jacqueline. Appreciate all
your help and suggestions!
on 9/13/08 10:21 PM, J. Landman Gay at [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Mark Srebnik wrote:
>> Greetings Revolutionistas*,
>>
>> Just discovered the Use-Rev Listwanted to jump in and say "Hello" to
On Sep 14, 2008, at 1:25 AM, Ken Ray wrote:
"What benefit is it to the Rev developer (not the engine) to have
the keys
NOT sorted?"
I can't think of a really good everyday example, but here's a made up
one: Suppose you're asking people for a list of possessions, and want
them to pick of
David Bovill wrote:
2008/9/14 Richard Gaskin
For accessing specific elements from large collections, arrays outperform
any lineoffset in lists or any other method I can think of by several orders
of magnitude.*
Read, "It's a good hash mechanism". :)
When I need ordinal sequential access, I u
Also, there seems to be a speed advantage with using the multi-
dimesional arrays:
on mouseUp
put the millisecs into ts
repeat with i = 1 to 1000
repeat with j = 1 to 1000
put "counting" into tArray[i,j]
end repeat
end repeat
put the millisecs - ts into inTime
I believe that it's in the nature of hash tables (which is what Rev's
arrays are, I think) that they do not preserve the order of keys.
If so, then the engine would have to maintain an ordered index
separately. This would likely affect performance, so perhaps we
wouldn't always want it...
On 9/13/08 10:38 PM, "Dick Kriesel" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Maybe the benefit of unsorted keys is faster execution. Why wait for a sort
> if you don't need it?
I believe the logic in the realm of PHP and web pages and databases are
often-used functions such as
explode(' ',explode(',', expo
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