I put mine in /Users/Shared/My Livecode. That way any account that logs in can 
use LiveCode with all the plugin's intact. That will probably never happen, but 
I am a stickler for such things. It keeps me from shooting myself in the foot, 
which must be really dam painful. 

> On 12/30/10 4:25 PM, dunb...@aol.com wrote:
> 
>> My installer did not create a folder "Documents/LiveCode/Plugins", if that
>> matters. I can certain navigate, via that preferences dialog, to the folder
>> in question. Or anywhere around it.
> 
> I know, they'd avoid some confusion if they created those folders for you. 
> Anyway, the enclosing folder can be named anything and placed anywhere (but 
> best to avoid the app folder, make it a user location.) But inside that you 
> must have a folder named exactly "Plugins". And your plugins go there.
> 
> If you still have a My Studio (or My Enterprise) folder inside Documents, put 
> your plugin inside the Plugins folder in there and point to My Studio (or 
> whatever.)

OT: Speaking of which, I have an entertaining and educational 
shoot-yourself-in-the-foot story for anyone interested. When I was in the US 
Navy, I served aboard a destroyer called the USS Decatur. A more scurvy lot of 
maladjusted, devil may care sailors you will be hard pressed to find on any 
ship that sails the seven seas. Seriously, almost everyone was ill tempered and 
had an attitude about something. I think people were assigned to this command 
as some kind of punishment. Frighteningly enough, this particular destroyer was 
Nuclear Anti-sub Anti-ship torpedo capable, and often carried Nuclear ASROC's 
on board, although only the CO, XO and Weapons officer knew if it did at any 
given time or not. 

Necessarily, for training purposes, Security Alerts were staged, which involved 
appointed guards that were ALWAYS making the rounds going into a high alert 
condition and checking all the sensitive areas where a bad guy might be trying 
to get at the Big Boy Ammo. We were told that these Security Alerts were never 
drills. We were always to assume it was the real thing and execute them as 
such. The first thing that the roving patrol was required to do was unholster 
his Colt 45 that they were properly trained to carry and use, pull back and 
lock the slide, Insert a magazine of Little Boy Ammo, and then carry it pointed 
upwards with the finger off the trigger whilst making the rounds. 

On one particular day, a second class petty officer in a particularly nasty 
mood had to stand a second round of the security patrol because his relief was 
AWOL. To make matters worse, they staged a security alert minutes before he was 
to be relieved. (They really loved to do things like that). Of course, you 
wouldn't have a change of the watch during a security alert for obvious 
reasons, so now this guy was forced to stand 2+ watches, with no definite time 
for his being relieved. 

So now picture him doing his rounds, steaming like an overcooked potato, whilst 
carrying around a colt 45 with magazine inserted and full of those nasty little 
lethal lead pellets, with the slide locked back. Scary huh? But at least if 
there really was a bad guy, he could drop the slide and fire relatively easily, 
without running the risk of accidentally shooting someone. I suppose if there 
really was a bad guy and he encountered him, his mood was perfect. Now, 
Military command has been called a lot of things, but stupid is not one of 
them. So if you followed this you will realize there still is no round in the 
chamber. All well and good. 

But this particular alert went on for almost an hour after the man was supposed 
to be relieved, (or so it seemed to him) so when they called All Secure, he 
stomped down to the quarterdeck griping and moaning the whole way. When he got 
there, he laid the gun down on the podium, whipped off his belt with all the 
clips (except for the one that was still inserted in the gun of course), and 
while still biching and fuming to the guy relieving him, he watched as his 
relief put on the belt, dropped the slide, stuck the gun in the holster and, 
yes kids, pulled the trigger. I kid you not. There had to be some soiled 
underwear amongst the few sensible sailors standing around on deck, or should I 
say now sprawled on their faces all over the deck. 

Now needless to say, about 12 things that were supposed to happen to prevent 
this, didn't. They were *supposed* to remove the magazine (if there was one in 
the gun), pull the slide back, poke a finger in the chamber, look through and 
see light in the barrel, look through the handle and see light there too, put 
the gun down on the podium, take out all the magazines, count the bullets, take 
the belt off, put it on the podium, and then watch the relief do everything in 
the opposite order (except for inserting a magazine in to the gun obviously), 
with the final 4 actions being, drop the slide, point the gun at the water, 
pull the trigger and holster the gun. 

So the moral of the story my dear friends, is people who are not stickler's for 
procedure, even when it doesn't matter, eventually "shoot themselves in the 
foot". And no, I was neither of the two. C'mon, how many of you thought I 
was??Needless to say, neither of those sailors re-enlisted. I don't think the 
Navy would have let them even if they wanted to. That should make you feel at 
least a little bit safer! 

Bob


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