Hi, I guess that I missed some stones, too :-) even if I didn�t went far with Rev yet. As Dar Scott I am watching the list and searching for notes about those mistakes but I guess that lots of the tiny bugs don�t even get a report here. Bug reporting is a lot of work because you have to reproduce the incident and at least explain it in detail. As far as I am concerned I will try to fill in some of the gaps as soon as I start to use Rev seriously.
regards, Olaf > From: Dar Scott [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] > Sent: Tuesday, March 19, 2002 7:25 PM > > On Sunday, March 17, 2002, at 01:38 PM, Alexander Liden wrote: > > I have still another question. Is Revolution version 1.1 > (or 1.1.1) a > > stable product. Many times I get errors from Revolution > even when I'm > > doing exactly by the manual. It's all right to have birth trouble, > > every > > new product has it, but I would like to know if other > people experience > > the unstability of Revolution or am I the only one. > > You are not alone. I am new to Revolution and I have had trouble > with the "unstability of Revolution." > > Of course, some of the time I have probably inadvertently said, > "Revolution, please lock up." However, some crashes are not mine. > And little querks are not mine. > > You are right about "birth trouble". Revolution is > multidimensional as far as development goes and growth on one front > can affect another. > > Circumstances have trained the experienced user to certain > methods. Newbies like us play an important role; we naively try > things different ways; more than trying things, we click on cards > or buttons in a weird order and strange things happen. Bugs that > an experienced user will never find we find. > > My strategy is to watch the Revolution discussion lists while > learning Revolution. > > There is a story about a Baptist preacher, a priest and a rabbi who > went fishing at a small pond. At one point the priest stood up and > said he was going to try the other side. He walked across the > surface of the pond to the other side and dropped his line into the > pond. A moment later the rabbi said he would do the same. And he > did. The preacher stood there with his eyes open wide and then > decided if they could do it, he could. With one step he fell into > the pond. The priest turned to the rabbi and said, "Do you think > we should have told him where the stones are?" > > Well, I, for one, appreciate those on this list letting us know > where the stones are. > > Dar Scott > Revolution Newbie > > > _______________________________________________ > use-revolution mailing list > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > http://lists.runrev.com/mailman/listinfo/use-revolution > _______________________________________________ use-revolution mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://lists.runrev.com/mailman/listinfo/use-revolution
