In observing this discussion, it seems that the complexity of the issue is
in the conversion of the 24 binary bits into Hexadecimal and vice versa.  Is
there a reason you can't use the 24 bits as the filename instead of the Hex
conversion?

Charlie Fiskeaux II
Media Designer
The Creative Group
www.cre8tivegroup.com
859/858-9054x29


----- Original Message -----
From: "Howdy-Tzi" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Monday, June 03, 2002 12:39 PM
Subject: Re: <lingo-l> logical terms


At 17:48 +0200 06/03/2002, Michael von Aichberger wrote:

>Suppose I told you to look in a supermarket for all products that are a
>fruit and that are yellow.
>
>If you happen to have a banana in your hands, can you decide if it fits the
>selection at first sight or would you have to go through all products
again?

You do understand, I hope, that what you are speaking of here is
pattern recognition, and computers are completely incapable of such a
subtle and sophisticated concept. At the very least a robot carrying
a banana would have to recognize that fruit AND yellow happens to
match what it's currently got -- so it would not have to search again
-- but that's an issue of semantics and nothing more. Because it had
to, at some point or another, either:

   1. Be handed a banana by someone else; or
   2. Locate and retrieve the banana itself as part of a previous
search function.

In either case it would still have to run its DB to make sure that
what it was currently holding matched the criteria. (if heldObject =
"yellow" and heldObject = "fruit" then...)

What you're wanting to do is -- if I understand correctly -- have a
kind of internal, intuitive index of all possible items. You can
approach that with a database, but you are still going to have to
create search fields for users to employ; or perhaps it would be more
useful to think of them as a sophisticated series of interconnected
toggle switches instead.

Then you're just getting access to data handles rather than searching
(though I'm still not sure there's a real distinction as far as the
computer is concerned), but before you can do even that, you've got
to construct things in such a way that what the users want can be got
in the first place.

--

              Warren Ockrassa | http://www.nightwares.com/
  Director help | Free files | Sample chapters | Freelance | Consulting
        Author | Director 8.5 Shockwave Studio: A Beginner's Guide
                    Published by Osborne/McGraw-Hill
         http://shop.osborne.com/cgi-bin/osborne/0072195622.html
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