The MobileKey module comes with the following settings. These settings are found here:
Administer » Site configuration » MobileKey
Since you generally give one URL to your users, your home page (called Front Page in Drupal), it can be practical to send Mobile phone users to a special URL so when they access your site they see a better adapted front page than the usual.
The settings accept a local path (i.e. mobile) or a full path (i.e. http://mobile.example.com/).
Note that this gives you a way to use the ThemeKey capability to change the theme of all ...
The following are problems that have not been resolved and will probably not be.
At times, you enter the tag as in [node:123 cck=title] and it is not converted by the filter.
There are 3 common reasons for this to append:
The 3rd one is certainly the most likely explanation once you made sure that the filter was effectively selected for that node. In many cases, it will be the missing ...
This tag defines the tab index of any text object (static and dynamic text objects.)
The depth references the object which is assigned the tab index. The tab index defines the order in which objects are sorted to know where to go next when the tab key is pressed.
This documents makes use of structure definitions that very much look like C structures. It is important to note that this is not all that true since the data saved in a SWF file are very specific and they don't follow the default, inflexible (as in static,) C definitions.
The following pages define the basic types used in this document. The comments explain in more details how each type is used.
Note that except for bit fields, all types start on a byte boundary. Nothing will be aligned on more than one byte.
Here you will find a few of the software solutions that have been made possible by Made to Order Software Corporation. Feel free to contact us for more information.
Made to Order Software created Snap! Websites, a CMS system, which allows customers to create their own websites, hosted on our servers.
The new version of Snap! is actually Open Source. You can find more information about Snap! Websites Open Source on the Snap! Website a C++ CMS website.
A few customers using our old Snap! offer include:
This is a subject that comes back all the time in C/C++ boards.
Should you use assertions?
The answer is clearly yes. But the C/C++ assert() function is usually defined using a macro. Macros have several problems. The most common ones are: they offer no type checking, they do not warn you about weird side effects, they have a different syntax than the C/C++ language itself.
One good thing: for a fast program, the debug code used to check parameters, results, etc. is gone.
One really bad thing: if the expression in the macro has a side effect, the release program is different from ...