Can someone please send me a copy of Psion chess which works on QPC2 - my version doesn't - it used to work on Aurora!!
Also, does anyone have a copy of scrabble which works on QPC2??
Rich Mellor
RWAP Software
7 Common Road, Kinsley, Pontefract, West Yorkshire, WF9 5JR
TEL: 01977 614299
Is there a standard way to put a job to sleep? I notice that jobs
like Qpac
Files, QD, al close down their working windows and open a new
button-sized
window on the Button Frame (where available) . However the BT_SLEEP
utility
(a Qpac2 Thing) can put any job to sleep. It does NOT close the job's
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED],
Dave [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes
On Thu, 2 May 2002, Norman Dunbar wrote:
And, they don't have any QLs anywhere nowadays. (hopeless attempt to get on
topic)
Yes. If I ever get to twist Nasta's arm to do it (which won't be for a
while as he's got more important
In-Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
The QPTR examples (? by Tony Tebby) that were distributed with C68 had a
function menu_button that just unset a main window definition and placed a
suitably named button in the frame. Waking was just the reverse. The QPAC2
code was not used.
Christopher Cave
Dilwyn Jones writes:
Is there a standard way to put a job to sleep? I notice that jobs
like Qpac
First did you mean BUTTON_SLEEP?
Yes. Sorry.
the BUTTON_SLEEP program puts any reasonably behaved job to sleep, by
locking the job's windows, removing them from the display and then
Christopher Cave writes:
In-Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
The QPTR examples (? by Tony Tebby) that were distributed with C68 had a
function menu_button that just unset a main window definition and placed a
suitably named button in the frame. Waking was just the reverse. The QPAC2
code was not
Marcel Kilgus writes:
Just dug out one of the assembler PE programs I wrote (in 1993! Man,
time moves on). It does just use the QPAC2 thing for this job, quite
simple actually. However, and that's the unfortunate part, the name of
the thing got actually translated. Back then my program did