On Jan 24, 2012, at 5:15 PM, Pete wrote:
> Hi Ken,
> The problem I'm having is centering two controls - one is a button with an
> icon assigned to it and set to not display the name, and the other is a
> label immediately below the icon that displays what would normally be the
> button name. I s
Hi Ken,
The problem I'm having is centering two controls - one is a button with an
icon assigned to it and set to not display the name, and the other is a
label immediately below the icon that displays what would normally be the
button name. I set the two obects to have their vertical centers alig
On Jan 24, 2012, at 2:03 PM, Pete wrote:
> I do all that already, still looks different on Windows than on Mac, I
> think because of the different character widths of different fonts. The
> only way I can think to keep it looking the same is do all the centering,
> etc when a card is opened.
Oh
I do all that already, still looks different on Windows than on Mac, I
think because of the different character widths of different fonts. The
only way I can think to keep it looking the same is do all the centering,
etc when a card is opened.
On Tue, Jan 24, 2012 at 9:14 AM, Bob Sneidar wrote:
Set the alignment of the label to Centered, set the width to autofit, align
objects by their centers. One thing I do that seems to help is I set the width
of the object (field, label, button, menu) to the formatted width of the
object.
On Jan 23, 2012, at 4:19 PM, Pete wrote:
> Of course, ther
Hi Ken,
Thanks you for the scripts. I've basically adopted your approach of
setting the font based on what OS I'm running on and that makes things look
a LOT better! I think property profiles would do the job and I could just
set the appropriate profile based on OS at start up but I need to figur
Thanks Ken and Warren. In 99% of cases, the font, size, style, etc are
left at whatever LC's default is, which sounds like the system font for the
platform. I like the idea of having a small test application to find the
best solution for this, plus thanks Ken for the frontscript and other
ideas.
In the app I am writing now, I am going to have to face this issue. My solution
was going to be choosing fonts that either exist on both platforms, or
installing the ones that are not. I REALLY like the Belgium font for headers
and what not, so my intention is to install it on Windows in some ki
On 01/22/2012 11:55 PM, Pete wrote:
I just compiled and ran my fist standalone on Windows and I'm finally
realising the benefits of developing cross platform applications with LC.
I was pretty amazed when everything I developed on my Mac just ran as
expected on Windows!
The on;y problem I need
On Jan 22, 2012, at 11:55 PM, Pete wrote:
> I just compiled and ran my fist standalone on Windows and I'm finally
> realising the benefits of developing cross platform applications with LC.
> I was pretty amazed when everything I developed on my Mac just ran as
> expected on Windows!
>
> The on;
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