Well, I don't feel so @#$% stupid now. Anyway, I'll send along the picture I made. It will serve as the logo for my websites. It probably doesn't seem significant to yall, & in the grand scheme of things, it likely isn't. However, for those who haven't read my previous correspondence w/Clint, I'm totally blind now, & this is the first time since that event that I've been able to take a visual concept I had & translate it into a picture. There's something empowering in being able to do things like that. Yes, it did require some visual feedback, which is how I discovered this odd behavior. I guess I put the spaces in instinctively because my screenreader reads the size as four hundred thousand four hundred otherwise. I've learned my lesson--I won't do it anymore, & I'm sorry for buggin' you guys so hard the last couple days w/all my stupid questions. Anyway, it generated some list traffic if nothing else.
Have a good weekend, all. On 6/24/11, Kostas Oikonomou <k...@research.att.com> wrote: > On 06/24/11 06:17 PM, Clinton Jeffery wrote: >> I was surprised to not see an explicit statement in a quick >> scan of the Graphics Programming in Icon book regarding >> using spaces in attribute assignments. I did run Jackie's >> program on Linux, where it died with an error 145 (bad >> window attribute, catching and complaining about the extra >> spaces) and on Windows, where it ran with a wrong-size window. > > FYI, I tried it on Solaris, same behavior as on Linux. > > Kostas > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > All the data continuously generated in your IT infrastructure contains a > definitive record of customers, application performance, security > threats, fraudulent activity and more. Splunk takes this data and makes > sense of it. Business sense. IT sense. Common sense.. > http://p.sf.net/sfu/splunk-d2d-c1 > _______________________________________________ > Unicon-group mailing list > Unicon-group@lists.sourceforge.net > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/unicon-group > -- Blame the computer--why not? It can't defend itself & occasionally might even be the culprit Jackie McBride Jaws Scripting training materials: www.screenreaderscripting.com homePage: www.abletec.serverheaven.net
<<attachment: bvlogo.jpg>>
------------------------------------------------------------------------------ All the data continuously generated in your IT infrastructure contains a definitive record of customers, application performance, security threats, fraudulent activity and more. Splunk takes this data and makes sense of it. Business sense. IT sense. Common sense.. http://p.sf.net/sfu/splunk-d2d-c1
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