Sometimes applications running Windows 95/98 break with this type of
exception, whereas NT or 2000 (and presumably XP) can handle it and keep
going. If you're using 95 or 98 it might be worth trying the same thing with
NT.

A Floating-point exception basically means that a number you are trying to
use is too large/small to be handled sensibly. E.g. the result of a divide
by zero.

Hope this helps

Gavin

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Landmark
Geographic Solutions
Sent: 08 January 2002 16:30
To: MapInfo Listers
Subject: MI-L problem splitting plines




Hey Listers,

I am trying to split a region to a series of plines and I get this error =
in MI 6.5 "Floating-point exception - Invalid.", and the program =
terminates. Any ideas would be appreciated.

Thanks


LGS



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