> And here's one last trick: if a GIF is suitable for your needs > (one level of > transparency) you can use an animated GIF that contains each > clock face on a > separate frame. When you need to change the clock, simply script "set the > currentFrame of img myClock to x" where x is the frame number of the > appropriate clock face.
my personal favorite. You could have different images for night and day. Let's see. 12 images per hour * 24 hours per day = 288 separate images...lot's of images to keep track of *unless* it's one GIF file. Some points to note: 1) don't forget to set the repeatcount of img "myClock" to 0 2) You don't what to use frame differencing or bounding box removal settings for the GIF. Each frame should be a complete picture in itself. -Chipp _______________________________________________ use-revolution mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://lists.runrev.com/mailman/listinfo/use-revolution