thx for help! i tried <number but as you said it works only for unsigned integers.....
yesterday i ended up in using >float drop f>d d>s that works... i tried s" -097" evaluate this mornig... and it works realy fine.... it was much too easy.... ;) btw... maybe the gforth handbook should contain more of such simple tasks for newcomers.... though i think theres a time problem for the people who writes this stuff..... but theres another problem i have.... i have now written severall applicatrions with gforth... mostly for printing (kacheln, bookcovers, personalized terminplanners ready for duplex printing, binding..) or controlling of printers (building printjobs getting information of the printer like coloruseage, costs...) i would like to share them with others.... but i dont know how to write an installation routine so they will run on every linux system with gforth installed.... at this time i am now working on a digital copier with linux/gforth, with simple image manipulating (but more possibilities than commercial ones, scan to file, sorted printing and so on.... with speeds from 6 ppm to 400 ppm in a4 ... but the problem now is a cheap AND fast scannig solution (the avision scanners are good... but not cheap ;) greetings ralf --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
