yeah Sarah rocks... one of our best teachers..
On Sun, Jul 29, 2012 at 7:40 PM, Roger Eller wrote:
> Oops! I mean one of "Sarah's" how-to, hosted on Richard's site. :)
>
>
> On Sun, Jul 29, 2012 at 10:32 PM, Roger Eller
> wrote:
>
> > Save a splash screen stack as a standalone, plus a separate
Oops! I mean one of "Sarah's" how-to, hosted on Richard's site. :)
On Sun, Jul 29, 2012 at 10:32 PM, Roger Eller
wrote:
> Save a splash screen stack as a standalone, plus a separate stack for
> data. Here's one of Richard Gaskin's excellent how-to's:
>
> http://livecodejournal.com/tutorials/s
standard practice is to create another stack to hold the settings of things
that change and save it to a preferences or documents directory. Then each
instance on different computers can have its own settings. You might have
to rewrite some of your code to accomodate this.
Apple has put forth new
Save a splash screen stack as a standalone, plus a separate stack for data.
Here's one of Richard Gaskin's excellent how-to's:
http://livecodejournal.com/tutorials/saving_data_in_revolution.html
~Roger
On Sun, Jul 29, 2012 at 10:08 PM, Mark Rauterkus wrote:
> How does a Developer write a stac
Hi,
How does a Developer write a stack so that the Stand Alone Application
can save that updated version of the stack, really?
So, I get that the Stand Alone is "Read Only." Or, I think I get it.
I want to write a LC application and have it passed to a "coach" on a
Flash Drive as a stand alo