Sweet thanks!
Bob S
> On Oct 24, 2017, at 11:37 , Mike Bonner via use-livecode
> wrote:
>
> try this..
> set the shellcommand to "powershell"
> set the hideconsolewindows to true
> put shell("ls")
>
> should return a listing of files for the current directory.
>
> You could also make it in
try this..
set the shellcommand to "powershell"
set the hideconsolewindows to true
put shell("ls")
should return a listing of files for the current directory.
You could also make it interactive..
open process "powershell" for update
write "ls" & cr to process "powershell"
read from process "power
Ooookay I found a .NET port of iText called iTextSharp, and someone wrote a
PowerShell module that can access it for the purposes of filling windows forms
via the powershell.
So now the question becomes, can Livecode access powershell? I suppose I can
create a powershell script then launch it
Ya none of this is working. Apparently getField is not a function that is
exposed to the script editor.
Bob S
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p
> On Oct 24, 2017, at 03:03 , Pi Digital via use-livecode
> wrote:
>
> Or then you could do this:
>
>> window.getField("technotes").value = "This is only a test.";
>
Can't find variable window.
> That should make sense. If getField works that is. If not I would try
>
>> window.document.get
Hi Bob
Outside of a browser you can use this to find out your running process id’s
> function getSysRunningApps() { var oOutput =
> document.getElementById("processDisplay"); oOutput.value = ""; oOutput.value
> = getProcessList(); }
Or use this for getting a running apps open active window
>
Shake some dust off from my Acrobat JavaScript days...
I think you will have to open the document. You are in a new instance of
Acrobat without an currently open document.
Ralph DiMola
IT Director
Evergreen Information Services
rdim...@evergreeninfo.net
-Original Message-
From: use-livec