ONE MORE TIME.
I have clicked on unsubscribed and you keep sending these emails. Let's not get 
annoying here. I don't want to get nasty, OK?

-----Original Message-----
From: gtkmm-list [mailto:gtkmm-list-boun...@gnome.org] On Behalf Of L. D. James
Sent: Tuesday, August 20, 2013 10:58 AM
To: Markus Elfring
Cc: gtkmm-list@gnome.org
Subject: Re: What is the minimum number of lines to update a gui window without 
user clicking a button

On 08/20/2013 10:00 AM, Markus Elfring wrote:
>
>> But after getting the label widget changed to a textview widget and 
>> having the code actually work, the task was done.
>
> I got the impression that there are still some open issues remaining.
>
>
>> It's common for a new user to an environment to want to see something 
>> very clear... to print a HelloWorld as a starting reference.
>
> That is fine, of course.
>
>
>> Many people might not have problems if the HelloWorld included file 
>> IO, scroll locks, window decorations, and more.
>
> You can choose from which abstraction level and tool box the 
> experiments should start. I try to point out not to reinvent a coding 
> wheel.
>
>
>> That's the way it works in my case.
>
> You might be a beginner with GTK+ functions and classes while you 
> evolved to an advanced or even expert software developer in other 
> areas through the years eventually. I hope that you enjoy the next 
> technical challenges.
>
> Regards,
> Markus
Thanks! Markus.

And, No.  There aren't any significantly open issues.  The code presented by 
Alan works perfectly.  It has already been in production with my clients for 
over a week without a glitch.

I would be glad to implement a "gprint()" function to ease the flow for some of 
my other programs/C++ scripts/applications that haven't been implemented with 
the gui window, as well as some of my future project and overall understanding 
and learning.  But as I mentioned, I'm reserving that development for a future 
thread.

I really appreciate all the support I have had with this maillist in helping me 
with my tasks... and of course I'm testing everything posted to enhance the 
integrity of my coding.  I hope my testing and reporting back with keep the 
community interested in my next phase and continue to offer input.

Out of appreciation for the support that I'm getting, I'm also studying how I 
can become a contributor.  In other projects where I have worked, I have 
contributed in documentation writing, translating, and proofing.  
That is were I'm currently researching
(https://wiki.gnome.org/DocumentationProject/Contributing).

 From my reading and the standards described I see it takes a lot of 
dedication.  I appreciate the patience the community is showing with me.  I 
hope to give back to the community with my dedication by following all the 
provided steps.

Thanks!

-- L. James

--
L. D. James
lja...@apollo3.com
www.apollo3.com/~ljames
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