Here is more info that I hope will be helpful. We communicate using named pipes between programs we wrote in house. We have a couple of C/C++ programs that communicate with our MC app using standard Windows API named pipe functions. You read/write to named pipes the way you read/write to files. FWIW Visual Basic also supports named pipes (we use that language in our system also).
Named pipes is not a tool to use to communicate with canned applications (e.g. Word, Excel, etc.). I might be able to answer specific questions you might have. One specific caveat - As far as Windows versions go you can only create a named pipe on Windows NT/2000/XP. Windows 9x won't do that. We are using Windows 2000 Server and Professional. This may not be the solution you all were looking for but it works well for us. Larry Huisingh > From: David Bovill <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > > I'd love some more info on this.... > > David > > > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > Subject: RE: inter-process communication > > > > Richard, > > > > FWIW, I'm not sure how cross-platform it is but I've > written a DLL for the > > Win32 platform that I use to communicate between my MC app > and other Win32 > > non-MC apps via "named pipes". It seems to work really > well for us. I > > think there might be a similar mechanism on Unix/Linux. > > > > Larry Huisingh _______________________________________________ metacard mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://lists.runrev.com/mailman/listinfo/metacard
