certain inalienable rights… Ahhh. I love cheese.
Bob S
On Jan 24, 2021, at 9:26 AM, Mark Smith via use-livecode
mailto:use-livecode@lists.runrev.com>> wrote:
Thanks for weighing in on this issue Kee. I realize Apple grants unto itself
certain inalienable rights that are not always (in my opin
Thanks for weighing in on this issue Kee. I realize Apple grants unto itself
certain inalienable rights that are not always (in my opinion) wise, or
justified (ie. they are open to all sorts of corporate bias and malfeasance)
but as you say, “them’s the rules” and if you want to play in their sa
> On Jan 20, 2021, at 4:20 AM, Mark Smith via use-livecode
> wrote:
>
> Thanks Kee, but I am a bit puzzled by the restriction.
>
> That would require complicity from the businesses, which if reputable would
> be a stretch, no?
There is a significantly large number of certified developers. I
Andre,
You are probably correct.
Thanks to all of you who have responded to my question about deployment on the
web.
Best,
Bill
William Prothero
http://es.earthednet.org
> On Jan 20, 2021, at 8:22 AM, Andre Garzia wrote:
>
>
> Bill,
>
> :-) that topic is too large for a book to be honest
Bill,
:-) that topic is too large for a book to be honest.
What I recommend is actually building a desktop standalone. Forget the web
for that app, push for an app.
Best
A
On Wed, 20 Jan 2021 at 16:20, ELS Prothero <
proth...@earthlearningsolutions.org> wrote:
> Thank you, Andre, for you wisdo
Thank you, Andre, for you wisdom. What I take from your comments is if I want
to develop dynamic interactive web based apps with Livecode, I should get up to
speed on JavaScript and will need to either use Livecode to generate html5,
compiled with webAssembly, or find another platform to develop
WebAssembly (aka WASM) is not a silver bullet. It is not something like
"you compile to WebAssembly and then PROFIT".
WebAssembly and ASM.js (which is what the current HTML5 LC Runtime uses)
are very similar. The advantages of WASM is that it is a lot smaller –
since it is bytecode and not strings
So,
Displaying bundled content only (or mostly) allows Apple's static analysis
tools to take a look at your app. They can also identify outgoing
connections, so they know if you are opening remote pages. If all you do is
display local content, and there is no outgoing connections, then security
an
> Thanks Kee, but I am a bit puzzled by the restriction.
>
> That would require complicity from the businesses, which if reputable would
> be a stretch, no? For example, if I had an app that linked to course
> selections on University websites, are they going to suggest that these could
> be p
Thanks Kee, but I am a bit puzzled by the restriction.
That would require complicity from the businesses, which if reputable would be
a stretch, no? For example, if I had an app that linked to course selections on
University websites, are they going to suggest that these could be portals to
ped
e
Cc: William Prothero
Subject: Re: Considering work with livecode server
Hmmm…. I see:
"Add WebAssembly build target in HTML5 deployment”, in the"team is working on
right now” category. I guess, given all the delays and getting HTML5 up, I
won’t hold my breath. But, I’ll certainly be
kee nethery wrote:
> On Jan 19, 2021, at 7:58 AM, Mark Smith wrote:
>>
>> Hi Andre, how are “apps to bundled content” different from “apps that
>> are portals to web content" (Jacque’s description)? Or put another
>> way, if someone wanted to design a tourist app that highlighted
>> interesting l
William Prothero wrote:
> It would sure be nice if there was some equivalent to shockwave...
For all practical purposes we do:
The Shockwave plugin was an executable engine you could download and
install once, and then play a wide range of scripted interactive media
with it.
A LiveCode stan
> On Jan 19, 2021, at 7:58 AM, Mark Smith via use-livecode
> wrote:
>
> Hi Andre, how are “apps to bundled content” different from “apps that are
> portals to web content" (Jacque’s description)? Or put another way, if
> someone wanted to design a tourist app that highlighted interesting loc
Hmmm…. I see:
"Add WebAssembly build target in HTML5 deployment”, in the"team is working on
right now” category. I guess, given all the delays and getting HTML5 up, I
won’t hold my breath. But, I’ll certainly be watching for it. Gaads, another
subscription to purchase. But getting real livecode
WebAssembly is on the roadmap.
https://livecode.com/resources/roadmap/
> Op 19 jan. 2021 om 20:43 heeft William Prothero via use-livecode
> het volgende geschreven:
>
> Dan:
> I just did a bit of Googling and wow! It sounds like a capability to compile
> to WebAssembly would put LiveCode in
Dan:
I just did a bit of Googling and wow! It sounds like a capability to compile to
WebAssembly would put LiveCode in the big time. I wonder if there is any
interest from the dev team. Sounds much more useful than HTML5.
Best,
Bill
> On Jan 19, 2021, at 11:13 AM, Dan Brown wrote:
>
> When li
When livecode supports WebAssembly as a build target you'll be able to do
what you've asked
On Tue, 19 Jan 2021, 20:46 William Prothero via use-livecode, <
use-livecode@lists.runrev.com> wrote:
> Thanks, all, for your comments. It would sure be nice if there was some
> equivalent to shockwave, ba
Thanks, all, for your comments. It would sure be nice if there was some
equivalent to shockwave, back in the days. Of course, downloadable plug-ins
like shockwave and flash apparently have too many security issues and are not
allowed anymore.
HTML5 eventually? I assume HTML5 apps would run in
If only!
Bob S
On Jan 19, 2021, at 5:56 AM, Andre Garzia via use-livecode
mailto:use-livecode@lists.runrev.com>> wrote:
A website from 1995
needs to be just as valid to the browser as one from 2021.
___
use-livecode mailing list
use-livecode@lists.r
Hi Andre, how are “apps to bundled content” different from “apps that are
portals to web content" (Jacque’s description)? Or put another way, if someone
wanted to design a tourist app that highlighted interesting local tourist
destinations near them with a link you can click on to purchase ticke
Andre Garzia wrote:
> But apps that are browsers to bundled content are OK. That is how you
> get Apache Cordova and Phonegap to work.
>
> On Tue, 19 Jan 2021 at 02:06, Mark Wieder wrote:
>>
>>> On 1/18/21 2:20 PM, William Prothero via use-livecode wrote:
>>> Building a single web-based app that
Bill,
Let me second what Richard said, you'd be better served by building desktop
stack apps than by building web apps. There is no silver bullet for doing
web work, there is no magical technology that makes it as easy as LC. The
Web is a design by committee with various multi-billion companies do
But apps that are browsers to bundled content are OK. That is how you get
Apache Cordova and Phonegap to work.
On Tue, 19 Jan 2021 at 02:06, Mark Wieder via use-livecode <
use-livecode@lists.runrev.com> wrote:
> On 1/18/21 2:20 PM, William Prothero via use-livecode wrote:
>
> > Building a single
That's right. Apps that are just portals to web content are forbidden.
--
Jacqueline Landman Gay | jac...@hyperactivesw.com
HyperActive Software | http://www.hyperactivesw.com
On January 18, 2021 8:07:08 PM Mark Wieder via use-livecode
wrote:
On 1/18/21 2:20 PM, William Prothero via use-livec
On 1/18/21 2:20 PM, William Prothero via use-livecode wrote:
Building a single web-based app that avoids the world of all the mobile apps
and desktop idiosyncrasies is attractive.
I thought mobile stores (Apple, etc) explicitly disallowed apps that
were essentially just web browsers to exter
William Prothero wrote:
> Richard,
> I did understand that the server was pretty much like php, but I
> didn’t know how much beyond that it could go in terms of dynamic
> interaction with screen objects.
LC Server does have the ability to export graphics, but being at the far
end of an HTTP con
Hi Bill,
If you just want to put together good-looking quick and dirty webpages
that don’t need database interaction, you might want to use Apple’s
Keynote software. You can put together a presentation with links
from one page to another, and just export the whole thing as HTML.
It works really g
Richard,
I did understand that the server was pretty much like php, but I didn’t know
how much beyond that it could go in terms of dynamic interaction with screen
objects.
The reason I wanted to look into it’s use in a browser is that for education,
lower level grades use a lot of browser base
Bill Prothero wrote:
> I’m considering doing some work with LiveCode server.
...
> Can I position and drag graphic images around. For example, I’m
> thinking of the capability to create an image with various parts
> that I can click to hide and position based on mouse drags or
> clicks or whateve
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