AW: lingo-l OOP question

2002-09-11 Thread Michael von Aichberger
Hi Daniel! You could easily test it by a) watch the freebytes / freeblocks both commands don't work in Windows (at least not for me: win2000, Dir 8.5G) I would be lucky if I could use them change the image good idea, maybe I'll do that, unless someone else confirms the impression you're under

Re: AW: lingo-l OOP question

2002-09-11 Thread Evan Adelman
i think an even more sure fire way to see if all images dealt w/ are the same object, is if you just throw in a put imageXYZ command. if you have your image contained in variable x and you pass x to a new object, and the new object holds the image in variable y, if, from each object you put

Re: AW: lingo-l OOP question

2002-09-11 Thread Mark A. Boyd
At 06:28 2002-09-11, Michael von Aichberger wrote: You could easily test it by a) watch the freebytes / freeblocks both commands don't work in Windows (at least not for me: win2000, Dir 8.5G) I would be lucky if I could use them Yea, they've returned bogus information on every Win system I've

Re: AW: lingo-l oop question

2002-08-02 Thread Irv Kalb
Michael, Welcome to the wonderful world of OOP. Actually, your questions are really about OOD (object oriented design). I'm sorry, but I don't fully understand what your program is trying to do. I'm sure that it's because I don't know enough about video rather than your explanation of the

AW: lingo-l oop question

2002-08-01 Thread Michael von Aichberger
It looks at the data and finds out what source images are needed. I assume here you are referring to what image frames were specified by the user. If so, I'll buy that. No, to give you a simplified description of what could be going on: The sequence could be a zoom into or a pan across one