[REBOL] More PWS Questions and Issue Re:

2000-01-07 Thread news . ted
Title: More PWS Questions and Issue >> I followed the instructions at  http://www.rebol.org/userlist/archive/38/514.html , and that was an adventure in itself.  Any windows wizards out there willing to write a script or .bat file to make these registry settings easier and less scary for we mo

[REBOL] More PWS Questions and Issue Re:

2000-01-10 Thread reboldes
Title: More PWS Questions and Issue Hi Mark, If you need to test Rebol cgi scripts offline, you can use REBOL personal web server. I use the Cal Dixon's webserv.r from www.rebol.org/web/webserv.r  and it works fine.   In the same dir where's the webserv.r make dir named www  Copy your cgi-ge

[REBOL] More PWS Questions and Issue Re:(2)

2000-01-10 Thread johnkenyon
hi, > It's nothing you can do from a batch file or script, and, you're right, the Registry is just not meant for mere mortals. You can make changes to the registry from a batch file as follows. 1 Export the key (or branch) from regedit (Registry/Export Registry File...) 2 Use regedit /s .reg

[REBOL] More PWS Questions and Issue Re:(3)

2000-01-10 Thread allenk
2000 8:05 PM Subject: [REBOL] More PWS Questions and Issue Re:(2) > > > hi, > > > It's nothing you can do from a batch file or script, and, you're right, > the Registry is just not meant for mere mortals. > > You can make changes to the registry from a batch file

[REBOL] More PWS Questions and Issue Re:(3)

2000-01-10 Thread news . ted
That works so long as the incidentals, like paths, are the same, but would break if your Web server was on drive D:, for example. -T. *** REPLY SEPARATOR *** On 1/10/2000 at 10:05 AM [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: hi, > It's nothing you can do from a batch file or script, and, you'

[REBOL] More PWS Questions and Issue Re:(4)

2000-01-10 Thread johnkenyon
True, I didn't realise the keys which needed editing had absolute paths in them ... > That works so long as the incidentals, like paths, are the same, but > would break if your Web server was on drive D:, for example. thanks for pointing that out. -reminisce on- Why did nobody copy the idea fo