In reply to your message of August 30, 2003
> h2pas is only a helper program that does the major part of C header
> translation. It uses longint by default as parameter type for
> macro's. When you want to have correct macro's you need to create/edit
> them manualy.
Yep... I know. But it occ
> > That's so pathetic. What'd the hacker do anyhow ? And how the heck does
> > > a hacker break into a *nix box ? (I assume it is...)
> > It's easy. At least if you run an old redhat, or run some of the dangerous
> > services.
> You really need to be deligent and keep up with the security updat
On zondag, aug 31, 2003, at 20:40 Europe/Brussels, L D Blake wrote:
Ok, I can accept that... but now I'm left to wonder what is causing
all those
bizarre range checking errors
At least some of the range check errors are due to errors in the
Windows unit (mingling cardinals=dwords and longints).
In reply to your message of August 31, 2003
> I simply think you're on
> a bad track suspecting that your problems are originated from some bugs
> in Windows unit.
Ok, I can accept that... but now I'm left to wonder what is causing all those
bizarre range checking errors and why my project's scr
L D Blake wrote:
In reply to your message of August 31, 2003
If you have a look at the implementation, you'll quickly find, that
all of the examples you listed in this mail make absolutely _no_
difference.
It DOES matter, especially in structures where windows is accessing things as
an offse
I am getting runtime error 6 with a "while not eof(filename)" statement
in a DOS program I am writing. I already successfully used it twice
previously in the same program (I actually copied the previous code and
altered it for the new filename and altered functionality), but when I
have used it
In reply to your message of August 31, 2003
>>Yep... I know. But it occurs to me that whoever did the conversion didn't
>>check very carefully.
> When the windows unit was created it was more important to get the compiler
> running correct natively under windows. After that nobody took care of
In reply to your message of August 31, 2003
> If you have a look at the implementation, you'll quickly find, that
> all of the examples you listed in this mail make absolutely _no_
> difference.
It DOES matter, especially in structures where windows is accessing things as
an offset from a point
From: L D Blake <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Organization: Secret society to end secret societies
To: Marco van de Voort <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject:Re: [fpc-pascal]About order of units...
Send reply to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date sent:
From: L D Blake <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Organization: Secret society to end secret societies
To: Peter Vreman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject:Re: [fpc-pascal]More strangeness...
Send reply to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date sent:
> h2pas is only a helper program that does the major part of C header
> translation. It uses longint by default as parameter type for
> macro's. When you want to have correct macro's you need to create/edit
> them manualy.
Yep... I know. But it occurs to me that whoever did the conversion didn't
In reply to your message of August 31, 2003
> At least some of the range check errors are due to errors in the
> Windows unit (mingling cardinals=dwords and longints). However, these
> are not errors that will change the course of your program in any way,
> as the data passed around doesn't chang
Hello!
I use ocrt unit since a couple of moths and I found it very useful.
The problem occures when I use nEdit function for string type variable.
In the codepage cp1251 (microsoft :-((( ) the symbol with code 255 ($FF) is
a cyrillic letter that sounds like "ya".
When I press its key, nothing hap
From: L D Blake <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Organization: Secret society to end secret societies
To: Michalis Kamburelis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject:Re: [fpc-pascal]About order of units...
Send reply to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date sent:
In reply to your message of August 31, 2003
> I have one idea (although I'm no windows programmer). How do you play
> sound files - using some kind of your own code, or relying on default
> Windows handlers (i.e. installed Windows codecs)? If it's the latter,
> you might be possibly using IE for
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