Message de Johnny Rosenberg date 2010-05-29 23:05 :
I know about the GetSystemTicks() function, but isn't that System
Ticks rather than time? Like CPU time or something like that.
I want to know the time from when I start doing something until it's
done in absolute time. now() would work if
Message de Konstantin Tokarev date 2010-05-29 19:10 :
On MS-Windows the result is in milliseconds, with a precision of 16 ms due to
IBM PC hardware design.
Does it mean that results of OOo Basic scripts may be platform-dependent?
Help says it depends on OS. I have not tested on other OS
2010/5/30 Bernard Marcelly marce...@club-internet.fr:
Message de Johnny Rosenberg date 2010-05-29 23:05 :
I know about the GetSystemTicks() function, but isn't that System
Ticks rather than time? Like CPU time or something like that.
I want to know the time from when I start doing something
2010/5/30 Bernard Marcelly marce...@club-internet.fr:
Message de Konstantin Tokarev date 2010-05-29 19:10 :
On MS-Windows the result is in milliseconds, with a precision of 16 ms
due to IBM PC hardware design.
Does it mean that results of OOo Basic scripts may be platform-dependent?
Help
On 2010-05-30 10:15, Johnny Rosenberg wrote:
At least I know now that this isn't possible with OpenOffice.org
BASIC, and that's exactly what I wanted to know. Thanks.
Hi Johnny.
Yeah, unfortunately we can't load libraries from OOo Basic, otherwise it
should be fairly easy to load the
2010/5/30 Johnny Rosenberg gurus.knu...@gmail.com:
2010/5/30 Bernard Marcelly marce...@club-internet.fr:
Message de Konstantin Tokarev date 2010-05-29 19:10 :
On MS-Windows the result is in milliseconds, with a precision of 16 ms
due to IBM PC hardware design.
Does it mean that results of
The following line of code has worked for some time, including the
current production build. I have not checked it against the latest
release candidate:
oConfigProvider =
GetProcessServiceManager().createInstanceWithArguments(_