Bless the engine, my son.
--
Stephen Barncard - Sebastopol Ca. USA - Deeds Not Words
On Wed, Jul 1, 2015 at 2:55 PM, Bob Sneidar
wrote:
> To which I might add,
>
> Don’t put bad gas in the engine
> Don’t over rev the engine
> Don’t try to pull the engine apart, then put it back together “more b
To which I might add,
Don’t put bad gas in the engine
Don’t over rev the engine
Don’t try to pull the engine apart, then put it back together “more better”
I’ll leave it up to everyone’s imaginations to determine what the coding
correlations for these are. It’s only my intent to seem wise.
Bob
David V Glasgow wrote:
> The good news is that using the launch url workaround recommended by
> Richard (below) worked fine. So anyone encountering the same issue
> can take this route. Thanks Richard.
>
> Why Revmail should fail in the way I have described is beyond me.
> Maybe brighter coders
I originally sent this a couple of days ago, but it has never appeared on the
list. Apologies if it ends up a double post….
Based on the advice received when I posted this issue, I checked the result
immediately after the revmail line was executed.
Interestingly, the result-put line was not e
David V Glasgow wrote:
> I had carefully tested all the complex stuff, but hadn’t bothered
> with this because it was a single line of script:
>
> revMail “Cluster.Buster@*.nhs.uk",,"Cluster Buster - help
> I'm stuck"
>
> It works fine in the dev environment, and on Mac standalones.
David,
A lot has to do with what email client is installed on that machine and if it
is open and running. For consistent results, I usually call a VB script to
create the email and then send it to the users Outlook client. I didn't write
it but I would be more than happy to share it if you ar
Hello Folks,
I am just doing the final tweaks on an app designed for an NHS Trust to support
clinical decision making . It is exclusively a Win environment. So far, apart
from the usual font faff, the deployment platform hasn’t given me any real
headaches. However, a week before roll out I h