Why not do what I have done over the years, any useful tips from posts
are pasted to my own library

There is a wealth of information in the various sources, it is just a
matter of reading and working through the tons of examples. eg AB
library, AB yahoo groups file libraries, AB yahoo groups posts (search
for different topics/keywords), User Knowledge base, AB Knowledge
base, AB members area, and not to forget the AB help files (that
contain a great search facility), and probably a few more I cannot
recall from top of the head

-- 
Cheers
Graham Kav
AFL Writing Service
http://www.aflwriting.com

On 08/02/2008, brian_z111 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Some people do better with a book because of the formal structured
> approach. I agree with you on the wealth of resources though. We
> shouldn't overlook the forum either. Look at the answer at VarSelect
> (var1, var2,n) etc - the forum virtually wrote a chapter on demand -
> you can't beat that.
>
> Graham's and Tomasz's forum answers, over the years, are a book in
> themselves as well (thanks to all who continually answer code
> questions in the forum - a book would be nice to have but we would be
> lost without you all).
>
> brian_z
>
>
>  --- In [email protected], Grant Noble <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> > Did you bother to read the manual or look at the AFL library? Those
> are huge resources in
> > themselves. More than enough there to begin anyone with coding.
> When I was starting I was grateful
> > that I didn't need to spend money on books. Neither do you..
> >
> > normanjade wrote:
> > > I dont get it. Where are we supposed to learn the language? There
> > > doesn't seem to be any good resources out there. Anybody know
> where to
> > > go? I can only find very basic info.
> > >
> > >

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