Hi,
I tried this:
function stackIsOpen1 pLongID
return (the short name of pLongID is among the lines of the
openstacks)
end stackIsOpen
was, by my measurement, 4 times slower than
function stackIsOpen2 pLongID
set the itemDelimiter to "/"
return (char 1 to -6 of item -1 of pLongID) is among the lines of
the openStack
end stackIsOpen
on mouseUp
if stackIsOpen1(the long id of me) then
beep
end if
if stackIsOpen2(the long id of me) then
beep
end if
end mouseUp
And both functions always return false! stackIsOpen1() since it takes
the short name of the button rather than the stack and stackIsOpen2
since the short name of the stack is not the same as the file name of
the stack.
The only way I've found to do it is like this:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
----
--
-- ISMGetStackShortName
--
------------------------------------------------------------------------
----
function ISMGetStackShortName theObjectLongID
local myStackFilePathName
put value(word wordoffset("stack",theObjectLongID )+ 1 of
theObjectLongID) into myStackFilePathName
return the short name of stack myStackFilePathName
end ISMGetStackShortName
if ISMGetStackShortName(theObjectLongID) is not among the lines of
openStacks then
end if
All the Best
Dave
On 18 Apr 2006, at 14:07, Mark Smith wrote:
Well, since
function stackIsOpen pLongID
return (the short name of pLongID is among the lines of the
openstacks)
end stackIsOpen
was, by my measurement, 4 times slower than
function stackIsOpen pLongID
set the itemDelimiter to "/"
return (char 1 to -6 of item -1 of pLongID) is among the lines
of the openStack
end stackIsOpen
I wouldn't assume that the engines routines for getting short names
etc, are going to be faster than string slicing.
I've no idea what kind of overhead there is in calling externals,
and it'd have to be a pretty good external to beat Rev's string
handling, I think...
Best,
Mark
On 18 Apr 2006, at 13:28, David Burgun wrote:
Hi,
I was really just after some speed. The problem is that this quite
a common thing to want to do, you can do it, but it means parsing
a string, which although the solution provided by the wonderful
people on this list is pretty fast, it's still slow for doing
something like this, which seems pretty silly really since I
assume that this information would be almost instantly available
in the Engine. I was actually considering writing an External
Command to do this, but not sure how fast that would be and
whether the solutions provided thus far would be quicker. Any
ideas???
Thanks a lot
All the Best
Dave
On 18 Apr 2006, at 13:18, Mark Smith wrote:
I see what you mean. Maybe what's needed is a library of
functions to deal with this sort of thing.
Mark
On 18 Apr 2006, at 10:34, David Burgun wrote:
Hi,
The problem with that is if you have groups or nested groups,
you then have to loop thru until you find the card or stack.
All the Best
Dave
On 15 Apr 2006, at 13:07, Mark Smith wrote:
Well, you could try using 'the owner of'. I haven't
experimented with it much, so I don't know how flexible it is.
Best,
Mark
On 15 Apr 2006, at 12:54, David Burgun wrote:
Hi,
Thanks a lot for this. One thing that has puzzled me is why
you can't access things like the stack or card of an object.
For instance why can't I just do this:
put the short name of the stack of the long id of me into
myStackName
or
put the short name of the card of the long id of me myCardName
Which would return the name of the stack/card that the object
resides in.
It just seems like this ought to work, in fact when I found
out that RunRev didn't support this I was surprised!
Any ideas why this isn't supported?
All the Best
Dave
On 15 Apr 2006, at 02:33, J. Landman Gay wrote:
Mark Smith wrote:
> I just had a doh! moment in response to your <the short
name of
> pStackLongID>, but then in order to see how much faster the
engine does
> this, I tested it the same way I tested my first tries
(which was
> actually with 10000 iterations, not 1000), and
>
> function stackIsOpen pLongID
> return (the short name of pLongID is among the lines of
the openstacks)
> end stackIsOpen
>
> takes nearly 600 ms!
Interesting. I never time these things enough. It looks like
if a script needs to make repeated calls to the function,
then your way would be preferable because of the speed increase.
It's been an interesting experiment, I like when the list
does these things.
--
Jacqueline Landman Gay | [EMAIL PROTECTED]
HyperActive Software | http://
www.hyperactivesw.com
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