![]() ![]() SOLID 2.ĭon't get me wrong, you can create a Windows app that looks and runs ok. Ok support, hasn't been touched in over 10yrs (with a couple of exceptions that I will describe next), applications look old (unless you use additional 3rd party plugins), applications are huge (will describe next), does not shine. Good support, still evolving, still a pain to deploy, applications look kind of low-budget and cheap (unless you get additional 3rd party plugins or use a lot of declares to work with native controls). ![]() A 64-bit math application for the most part will be slower than a 32-bit application (plenty of examples on the forum, for those who may not believe such thing is possible).Įxcellent support, constant updates, streamlined applications bundles, can create fast and snappy applications, truly shines. Compiler seems more of an interpreter than a real compiler in that there is very little optimization. In a few of the "supported" platforms, a standard application will require 3rd party plugins if it is to look modern by any extent. It is on the type of applications, the look of the applications, and the support to each of the platforms that things differ. It indeed allows you to create cross-platform applications with relative ease. Documentation Window > Documentation: Navigating with the Back/Forward buttons now behave correctly instead of intermittently.Framework > All: DatabaseRow: Double values now preserve the same 20 digit decimal place precision that RowSet Double values do.Framework > All: Now PDFGraphics.DrawLine honors again the starting and ending coordinates when drawing diagonal lines.Miscellaneous: Now correctly loads the MSOfficeAutomation plugin (especially the Office module).IDE > Layout Editor: Dragging a Timer onto an iOS MobileScreen now correctly adds the Run event handler, instead of the incorrect Action event handler.IDE > Auto Complete: Properly show deprecated Array methods in autocomplete in older projects.Framework > iOS » Mobile: Graphics.DrawPicture no longer cuts off part of the image when specifying all parameters.Framework > Web: Fixed a visual issue while using.Framework > Web: Fixed an issue with WebLink that was not truncating long links.Framework > All: Using Dictionary.HasKey(), Lookup(), Value() and Remove() with an empty Text key value no longer crashes on Windows/Linux.Build: Reduced non-Universal macOS app size by stripping unused architecture parts from the final build.You want an array of container controls, make one - which would be a real array.Īdd a property to the window M圜C() As M圜ontainerControlĪdd an instance to both the window and M圜C and now you can use M圜C just like you would anything else. Maybe instead of making these statements you should ask for clarification. A container control in many ways, shapes and forms remove the need for using control arrays which aren’t arrays to begin with. Thanks for your opinion but it makes total sense. What has a container got to do with control arrays? Nothing… If they are in a control array this is easier than referring to each one individually.Ī container control does not in any way shape or form remove the need for using control arrays. I may want 10 instances of my custom control on one window and want to change the backcolor of each one at the same time. Say I use a container control to make a custom control which has a property backcolor. Worst thing… is I seem to be stuck with Xojo … since if I try to load this project back with RS2012… all I get is a blank screen there… Realize that Xojo incremented the INDEX by TWO, not by one.Breathe a sigh of relief when INSPECTOR comes back … and new control is there.click on the control in NAVIGATOR (click on the control in the window does no good).suffer a headache while you try and figure out what you may have lost.have INSPECTOR blitz out and go blank on you… yeah BLANK.finally figure out you need to click on CONTROL SET.Scratch you head trying to figure out where INDEX is… OH it isn’t there!.repeat 4-5 until you have the number of controls you need.WOW… talk about making something easy … into something Difficult ![]()
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