Mark Smith wrote:
Also, we shouldn't ignore the idea of saving data in a stack, rather than a text document. Not a substack, but a separate, faceless stack, that simply has your data in it's custom props, and mixing binary and text data is then possible, too. The size of an empty stack is about 4 Kb.

This makes it easy to keep whatever structure your data has natively in Rev, and makes it possible, if desired, to simply keep the data there, work with it, and save it whenever necessary. The stack can live wherever you choose, and you could easily store the user's name in it to identify it.

Stacks make excellent 'structured documents', and using them in Rev is obviously much easier and more efficient than working with XML.

Whenever I'm working in Rev stack files are my favorite format - here are some enticing tips for that:

<http://lists.runrev.com/pipermail/use-revolution/2002-July/006149.html>

--
 Richard Gaskin
 Managing Editor, revJournal
 _______________________________________________________
 Rev tips, tutorials and more: http://www.revJournal.com
_______________________________________________
use-revolution mailing list
[email protected]
Please visit this url to subscribe, unsubscribe and manage your subscription 
preferences:
http://lists.runrev.com/mailman/listinfo/use-revolution

Reply via email to