Tobias,
Thanks for your useful coding snippets. It would be good to put these
into the Gambas online documentation. This might save the same questions
being repeatedly asked in this mailing list!
--
Regards, John
--
R
On Sun, 15 Dec 2013, John Rose wrote:
> Bill,
>
> The textarea control (i.e. as you see it on the form) has a number
> of lines. But I'm also interested in an example for a textarea string
> having a "number of lines" (i.e. it
> contains \n escape characters). Also, I'm interested in an example w
Bill, take a look to gambas documentation for the easy way to save a string
to a text file.
http://gambasdoc.org/help/comp/gb/file/save?v3
Regards,
Ricardo Diaz
2013/12/15 John Rose
> Bill,
>
> The textarea control (i.e. as you see it on the form) has a number
> of lines. But I'm also interes
Bill,
The textarea control (i.e. as you see it on the form) has a number
of lines. But I'm also interested in an example for a textarea string
having a "number of lines" (i.e. it
contains \n escape characters). Also, I'm interested in an example where
a string is repeatedly presented (with diffe
On Sat, 2013-12-14 at 11:53 +, John Rose wrote:
> I have a TextArea containing a number of lines. I'm confused by the
> multiplicity of variants of the Open command. Can someone direct me to
> an example of this? I've already failed to find such an example in the
> Gambas online documentatio
You could try
File.Save("~/test.txt", TextArea1.Text)
Although this doesn't answer your question about the OPEN statement
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Sent from the gambas-user mail
I have a TextArea containing a number of lines. I'm confused by the
multiplicity of variants of the Open command. Can someone direct me to
an example of this? I've already failed to find such an example in the
Gambas online documentation.
--
Regards,
John
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