On Nov 21, 2004, at 12:36 PM, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

I am still a little unclear on the relationship of
stacks, substacks and cards. Supposing I have created
a mainstack already - what is the difference between
adding a new card to the mainstack or adding a new
substack? Stacks and substacks both have to have at
least one main card - yes? How is the relationship of
a substack to its stack, different from that of a card
to its stack (or substack)?

Okay, so far these explanations have seemed unclear to me (I don't think I would have understood them if I didn't already know the answer). So here goes...


Think of a "card" as a page from a book. Each page can have different text or pictures on it. In the case of hypermedia software (like Rev), a card can also have fields, buttons, and the like. Each card is a distinct page.

A "stack" then would be a book. Each stack can have one or more cards (pages), but only one card may be viewed at a time. You can switch from one card to another, much as you would flip from one page of a book to another. So let's say you are writing a choose-your-own-adventure book in Rev. You can do this super-easily using a single stack. For the first card in your stack, you might have a title card (like the title page of a book). Then put a button on the card to flip to the next card (page) using a command like "go to next card". You can add more cards to the stack to fill in additional "pages" of the book, and have buttons which switch to different pages. Since all of the cards are in the same stack, you can only view one card at a time, and as you switch cards, they take over the window.

The window is owned by the stack, and exactly one card from a stack is displayed at any given time while the stack's window is opened. One stack = one window. The window can be displayed in any of several different formats, including topLevel, modeless, modal, sheet, drawer, and palette (possibly others that I am not thinking of right now). These are different "styles" which can be applied to the window.

In order to display several windows at a time, you need several stacks -- one for each window. Each stack has one or more cards (pages), but is essentially a separate "book," distinct from the other stacks.

A stack file in Rev consists of one or more stacks. Exactly one of those stacks is considered the "main stack" of the stack file, and has some level of influence over the other stacks.

That main stack receives any messages sent to its "substacks" (any stacks in the same file as the main stack, other than the main stack itself), unless the substacks handle the messages and do not pass them along. This is part of the way inheritance works under Rev.


----------------------------------------------------------- Frank D. Engel, Jr. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

$ ln -s /usr/share/kjvbible /usr/manual
$ true | cat /usr/manual | grep "John 3:16"
John 3:16 For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.
$




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