While attempting to find a problem in my program using DEBUGSOURCES=all (thanks for mentioning that Rick) I was noting a lot (1894) of "(not handled FIX ME)" markers and left me thinking "am I really using that much 'out there stuff'?". This is only a small nit but I was wondering what the criteria for changing some of the following markers to "it works"? thor:path$ DEBUGSOURCES=all ./app_gui -sync >& lt926run.log6 thor:path$ grep "FIX ME" lt926run.log6|sort -k 3,3 |uniq -f1 Arg[0] : adjustLast (not handled FIX ME) Arg[0] : background (not handled FIX ME) Arg[15] : borderWidth (not handled FIX ME) Arg[7] : bottomShadowColor (not handled FIX ME) Arg[13] : cursorPositionVisible (not handled FIX ME) Arg[2] : deleteResponse (not handled FIX ME) Arg[2] : entryAlignment (not handled FIX ME) Arg[2] : font (not handled FIX ME) Arg[11] : fontList (not handled FIX ME) Arg[0] : foreground (not handled FIX ME) Arg[4] : iconName (not handled FIX ME) Arg[0] : iconPixmap (not handled FIX ME) Arg[0] : labelType (not handled FIX ME) Arg[2] : mappedWhenManaged (not handled FIX ME) Arg[8] : mwmDecorations (not handled FIX ME) Arg[0] : mwmInputMode (not handled FIX ME) Arg[0] : orientation (not handled FIX ME) Arg[4] : packing (not handled FIX ME) Arg[6] : separatorType (not handled FIX ME) Arg[0] : title (not handled FIX ME) Arg[8] : topShadowColor (not handled FIX ME) Arg[0] : transientFor (not handled FIX ME) Arg[2] : translations (not handled FIX ME) Arg[1] : unitType (not handled FIX ME) Arg[10] : value (not handled FIX ME) Arg[1] : windowGroup (not handled FIX ME) Arg[11] : wordWrap (not handled FIX ME) lesstif version 92.6 many of these come from XtVaSetValues calls. Some of the stuff has looked to me like it worked correctly like XmNtitle, XmNiconName, and XmNiconPixmap. Others like XmNwordWrap have been questionable. Or have tests proven that all of these are still Unstable? -- Todd Denniston, Code 6067, NSWC Crane mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] I'd crawl over an acre of 'Visual This++' and 'Integrated Development That' to get to gcc, Emacs, and gdb. Thank you. -- Vance Petree, Virginia Power
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