On Saturday 14 December 2002 07:43 pm, Brook Humphrey wrote:
> A good example of the is audacity. It's a project on sourceforge and uses
> wxwindows. It runs on linux windows and macos. and it looks the same on all
> of them. I might add it works well as Iuse it for allot of my audio needs.
If th
On Friday 13 December 2002 02:28 pm, Matthew Donadio wrote:
> Brian Yoon wrote:
> > 1) Has anyone considered using a cross-platform toolkit like wxWindows
> > for this project so that we all can work on the same code, be able to
> > compile on different platforms, and still maintain the look and fe
Joachim,
Your test program looks perfectly valid. I'll have a look at the code.
I added a new interface: SWCacher, that many classes, especially most of
the drivers, implement now. It gives standard functions to clear any
cached data they are holding. It was originally added out of the need
Troy,
I was working on BibleTime's parallel display of more than one lexicon, which
displays only the keys which are in all selected modules.
Please have a look at the following test program, to go though WebstersDict it
uses almost 400MB of Ram. I think it's a mem leak.
Am I doing something w
Does non-valid HTML effect the Google ranking or are you raising a different
issue?
We do need to make it valid HTML. Some of the mistakes might be mine, some
were introduced between the time the template left my hands and reached the
server. Most seem to be created by the dynamically inserted stu
On Sat, 14 Dec 2002, Don A. Elbourne Jr. wrote:
> I was just curious how Crosswire would fair on a Google search for "Bible
> Software."
The pages have the required tags but they fail the W3C validator.
Take a look at
http://validator.w3.org/check?uri=http://www.crosswire.org/sword/index.j
I was just curious how Crosswire would fair on a Google search for "Bible
Software." Here are the results:
1. Logos
2. Theophilos
3. SwordSearcher
4. e-Sword
5. Online Bible
6. Olive Tree
7. FreeBible.com
8. BibleWorks
9. Crosswire
10. OLB on the CCEL site
In the top ten front page of google i
We have three types of Java support :)
The Swig bindings can be used to create Java-classes to work with Sword usig
Java.
Joachim
> Actually, we have 2 flavours of Java SWORD these days. We've gained an
> independent project: Project B, that has decided to join our efforts and
> has been relab
Actually, we have 2 flavours of Java SWORD these days. We've gained an
independent project: Project B, that has decided to join our efforts and
has been relabeled: jsword, and we have our our older attempt at a class
by class port of the sword libraries that our website uses, now renamed
jswor
On Fri, 13 Dec 2002, Keith Ralston wrote:
> You should read up on the uses and origins of the article in Greek. Dana
> and Mantey have a nice brief description. Robertson and Moulton have quite
> a bit more to say.
>
I try to read some Moulton one of these days. Until then it would be
good to h
On Fri, 13 Dec 2002, Keith Ralston wrote:
> Sounds like a great Java project, ;-)
And we already have a good start in form of well-organized,
over-engineered ModEdit ;) :)
>
> > -Original Message-
> > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Brian Yoon
> > Sen
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