I can confirm Steve's observations OS X 10.11.6

George J. Molnar
@GJMolnar

> On Jun 10, 2016, at 8:40 PM, Steven Franke <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Hi Bill,
> I found another symptom. When I open wsjt-x, the wide graph appears, as I 
> stated. It turns out that there is also a small “orphan” window that stays 
> around even after I close the wide graph. The screen shot shows the state of 
> my screen just after opening wsjt-x. Note the small orphan window just under 
> the “UTC” label on the main window.
> Steve
> 
> 
> 
> <orphanwindow.tiff>
>> On Jun 10, 2016, at 10:18 PM, Steven Franke <[email protected]> wrote:
>> 
>> Hi Bill - 
>> I experiencing some unusual behavior in r6758. When I open the app after 
>> having last used MSK144, the wide graph opens instead of the fast graph. 
>> This is after exiting the program normally with the wide graph closed and 
>> the fast graph visible.
>> 
>> I’m also seeing different results from the MSK144 decoder (syncmsk144) when 
>> it is run from wsjt-x and when it is run from the command-line program 
>> msk144d.f90. This last is my problem - likely an array overrun, as the 
>> decoder does a bunch of array manipulations, and I have probably made a 
>> mistake somewhere.  I thought that I should mention it on the chance that it 
>> may have something to do with the first observation.
>> Steve
> 
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> What NetFlow Analyzer can do for you? Monitors network bandwidth and traffic
> patterns at an interface-level. Reveals which users, apps, and protocols are 
> consuming the most bandwidth. Provides multi-vendor support for NetFlow, 
> J-Flow, sFlow and other flows. Make informed decisions using capacity 
> planning reports. https://ad.doubleclick.net/ddm/clk/305295220;132659582;e
> _______________________________________________
> wsjt-devel mailing list
> [email protected]
> https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/wsjt-devel
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
What NetFlow Analyzer can do for you? Monitors network bandwidth and traffic
patterns at an interface-level. Reveals which users, apps, and protocols are 
consuming the most bandwidth. Provides multi-vendor support for NetFlow, 
J-Flow, sFlow and other flows. Make informed decisions using capacity 
planning reports. https://ad.doubleclick.net/ddm/clk/305295220;132659582;e
_______________________________________________
wsjt-devel mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/wsjt-devel

Reply via email to