Gentlemen,
The trigger will be 'pulled' once or twice a day only -- so these
external to LC options are also viable. Hadn't entered my head at
all!
Will be playing around with all these ideas and learn something!
Basically use Macs, but have couple unused Windows laptops --
sounds like Task
Whatever works for your situation! At least one of my jobs, which runs a few
times a week (pulling data from an internal system, generating and emailing a
PDF report) has to launch fresh each time because of a bug in the graph widget
which displays wrong if the script runs twice!
There are oth
Hmmm. Ok, but it seems having the LC app running invisibly all the time,
listening for a command, something the cron service could do through the
terminal easily enough, you could make it much more efficient. Just methods and
madness I suppose.
Bob S
> On Jul 12, 2022, at 13:15 , Ben Rubinst
I think I may not have been very clear.
This isn't LiveCode doing anything special; just a standalone LiveCode app
that either does something immediately on launch (and then quits), or inspects
the command line parameters to decide what to do (and then quits).
I usually create a .bat file (on
It seems to me that if you have an open socket to listen for commands, you
could have the chron or windows scheduler send those commands to your LC app.
Ben, some syntax would be helpful.
Bob S
> On Jul 12, 2022, at 07:48 , Ben Rubinstein via use-livecode
> wrote:
>
> Hi Tim,
>
> On 11/0
Hi Tim,
On 11/07/2022 12:35, Tim Selander via use-livecode wrote:
I want to have an LC app running on a computer doing nothing but watching the
time. At predetermined times, I then want it to run a command. A call to an
API on a website.
My $0.02, FWIW: it this is really all your app is doi
I would suggest sending the "checkTime" message at the top of the handler
in case something happens in --your code
On Mon, Jul 11, 2022 at 11:28 AM Bob Sneidar via use-livecode <
use-livecode@lists.runrev.com> wrote:
> Slight improvement:
>
> local lInterval
> constant cInterval = 300
>
> on open
Slight improvement:
local lInterval
constant cInterval = 300
on openStack
put cInterval into lInterval
checkTime
end openStack
on checkTime
-- your code
send checkTime to me in lInterval seconds
end checkTime
setProp interval, pInterval
if pInterval is empty then
ask "Ent
I've got a library for adding CRON functionality, if you want something
more elaborate.
https://github.com/macMikey/mikeys-cron-library
On Mon, Jul 11, 2022 at 7:48 AM Tim Selander via use-livecode <
use-livecode@lists.runrev.com> wrote:
> Tore,
>
> Interesting! 'send in time' is a new one for me
Tore,
Interesting! 'send in time' is a new one for me.
Thanks!
Tim
On 2022.07.11 20:43, Tore Nilsen via use-livecode wrote:
For this I would use a recursive approach with «send in time» something like
this:
on openStack
checkTime
end openStack
on checkTime
## Do your routines of
For this I would use a recursive approach with «send in time» something like
this:
on openStack
checkTime
end openStack
on checkTime
## Do your routines of checking time, performing the required action etc.
send checkTime to me in 300 seconds. ## you set the interval to whatever is
Dear all,
I want to have an LC app running on a computer doing nothing but
watching the time. At predetermined times, I then want it to run
a command. A call to an API on a website.
In the old HC days, I remember using "on idle" to watch for a set
time. But even then, using "on idle" was les
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