Christopher Fairbairn wrote:

They use code along the lines of:

   import _pcceshell_support
  _pcceshell_support.Busy(0);

I haven't liked this, since it means each library needs to be aware of something
PythonCE specific. For cleaness I think the native C part of the Python
interpreter can (and should) take care of this.
Ah, this rings a bell.

I think according to the Windows CE compatibility guide, you're supposed to show the hourglass until your application is "ready for user input".

I believe it's up to the application .py file, not any libraries or interpreter, to make the Busy(0) call.

Only the application author knows how many modules need to be loaded and when the application really has "started".



--
Brad Clements,                [EMAIL PROTECTED]    (315)268-1000
http://www.murkworks.com AOL-IM: BKClements

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