Results for "Author: linguar amadala"
The ODL Converter Project is designed to take VB Types, Enums and Declare Statements and convert them into a format used by Visual C++'s .odl files (odl = Object Description Language). This also shows how to colorize code, for those who are interested
To display a standard necessary to make a visual basic application with heavy roots in the Application Programming Interface.
This is more for a programmer's tool then anything else. It allows you to select a window on screen with the mouse using a cursor and a smaller image representing that cursor on the dialog (which disappears when you click on it and drag it, reappearing when you make a selection)
Evaluates the input text and returns the result. Supports: multiple-argument functions, strings, octal, hexadecimal and decimal numbers, Recursion based method calls (as long as your stack holds out, it should be able to handle what you put into it)
The ODL Converter Project is designed to take VB Types, Enums and Declare Statements and convert them into a format used by Visual C++'s .odl files (odl = Object Description Language). This also shows how to colorize code, for those who are interested
To display a standard necessary to make a visual basic application with heavy roots in the Application Programming Interface.
This is more for a programmer's tool then anything else. It allows you to select a window on screen with the mouse using a cursor and a smaller image representing that cursor on the dialog (which disappears when you click on it and drag it, reappearing when you make a selection)
Evaluates the input text and returns the result. Supports: multiple-argument functions, strings, octal, hexadecimal and decimal numbers, Recursion based method calls (as long as your stack holds out, it should be able to handle what you put into it)
The ODL Converter Project is designed to take VB Types, Enums and Declare Statements and convert them into a format used by Visual C++'s .odl files (odl = Object Description Language). This also shows how to colorize code, for those who are interested
To display a standard necessary to make a visual basic application with heavy roots in the Application Programming Interface.
This is more for a programmer's tool then anything else. It allows you to select a window on screen with the mouse using a cursor and a smaller image representing that cursor on the dialog (which disappears when you click on it and drag it, reappearing when you make a selection)
Evaluates the input text and returns the result. Supports: multiple-argument functions, strings, octal, hexadecimal and decimal numbers, Recursion based method calls (as long as your stack holds out, it should be able to handle what you put into it)