David,

Yeah, if only Microsoft would make them fully backward compatible like
they tell everyone else to do.  In the early Windows days (286 and
first 3.0) days, when memory was very expensive, dlls were quite handy and
I used and created them quite often.  Nowadays, backward compability
and cheap memory make them far less useful.


Bruce Dayton



Friday, November 09, 2001, 4:15:33 PM, you wrote:

DAM> Bruce Dayton writes:

>> If you run Office or any other Microsoft apps, you may be using part
>> of IE already.  Microsoft shares many dlls across their software.  And
>> many other programs also take advantage of the Microsoft dlls.

DAM>  Which is the whole point of having .dll files in the first place.

DAM> Cheers,


DAM> - Dave

DAM> David A. Mann, B.E. (Elec)
DAM> http://www.digistar.com/~dmann/

DAM> "Why is it that if an adult behaves like a child they lock him up,
DAM>  while children are allowed to run free on the streets?" -- Garfield
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