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There is a world of difference between thinking something and actually checking it. If this was the default behaviour it is likely that many programs would not work.
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Nice quote
Could you please suggest a solution!
aks
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Solution to what? We have no idea what your code is doing, or what you are doing when you run it, beyond your belief that the focus moves after you run some dialog. The only way to move forward with this is to write a very simple test program to demonstrate the problem and run some tests until you can isolate exactly what is happening.
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The onus is on you to narrow the problem down to just the relevant code. Sane folks aren't going to chase links around and pull unrelated code from a project.
"One man's wage rise is another man's price increase." - Harold Wilson
"Fireproof doesn't mean the fire will never come. It means when the fire comes that you will be able to withstand it." - Michael Simmons
"You can easily judge the character of a man by how he treats those who can do nothing for him." - James D. Miles
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I did not done any specific code for the setting the focus. I just shared the framework generated code for easily reproducing the issue, so that you can understand the issue clearly.
aks
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I want to create an IDE which should have similar look and feel like Visual Studio itself.
For this I created a "Visual Studio Style" Project by usage of AppWizard.
Now I am wondering, how to implement "Windows Float" functionality?
What I mean exactely? e.g. when you look at Visual Studio's Solution Explorer window, there is a small down arrow in the title bar. When you click on it, a menue opens and you can change the window style to "float".
This feature I want to use instead of a non modal dialog, becaue this would be much more flexible.
Has anybody an idea, how to implement. Maybe it is also implement in the IDE Framework of the MFC, but I do not know how to activate??
Any ideas?
Many thanks
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How to use C to make a Mathematical / Statistical compiler for my final year project. i need help. Need someone that will put me through all the steps to achieve this project of mine. i havent actually seen any recent work on it. Thanks
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Member 11942996 wrote: How to use C to make a Mathematical / Statistical compiler for my final year project. So what in the world have you been doing prior to this?
"One man's wage rise is another man's price increase." - Harold Wilson
"Fireproof doesn't mean the fire will never come. It means when the fire comes that you will be able to withstand it." - Michael Simmons
"You can easily judge the character of a man by how he treats those who can do nothing for him." - James D. Miles
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0
down vote
favorite I have seen CPU scheduling algorithms (Rate monolithic - Real time CPU scheduling) or priority scheduling using array data structure
http://c-programmingguide.blogspot.in/2012/09/c-program-for-rate-monotonic-scheduling.html
But I would like to know if this is the preferred data structure if yes why OR if any data struture is preferred for RMS then which one is better and why
any suggestions would be appreciated
Thanks in advance
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Hello Everybody,
We have an application which is created in VC++ 6.0 version, in that we are displaying some colors (Pantone color) reading the colors from text file and displaying.
When I use the same text file (with same color details), in Visual Studio 2008 or higher, the application is displaying different color (actual color is this)
For example,
Original RGB is 198, 93, 82
Using color picker, for old application, its giving RGB as 120, 27, 20 and in the new application it shows 198, 93 and 82.
Will there be any color variation between old and new applications (visual studios)?
Thanks in advance,
A. Gopinath.
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Howdy, I'm not so sure I understand your question.
rgb(198,93,82) looks like This , while rgb(120,27,20) looks like This
Obviously, these 2 colours are not only very different in terms of their RGB values and their HSL values for that matter, but they also appear very different to anyone not unfortunate enough to be hit with R-G colour blindness. Aren't you actually telling us yourself that the colours appear differently?
Their pantone numbers are also very different, 180 U vs 1815 C
I can't help but wondering 3 things:
1) What is the format of the input in the text-file and the exact input that produces these colours?
2) How is this being transformed into a colour by your application?
3) What difference did you find when you stepped through the conversion process in your debugger in each of the versions of the application?
I'm not familiar with the conversion process between rgb <--> pantone to know if a small difference in precision could produce such a wildly different result, or if it's an integer-only process that could suffer from a signed/unsigned error. Showing the input and the way it results in a final colour could well help, though it may not.
"When I was 5 years old, my mother always told me that happiness was the key to life. When I went to school, they asked me what I wanted to be when I grew up. I wrote down 'happy'. They told me I didn't understand the assignment, and I told them they didn't understand life." - John Lennon
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Hello,
Thanks for your reply.
This is the format in text file in which pantone color details are written.
PANTONE Number Name L* a* b* sR sG sB
PANTONE 11-0103 TCX Egret 93.74 1.19 6.78 243 236 224
PANTONE 11-0602 TCX Snow White 94.93 0.1 2.67 242 240 235
PANTONE 11-0601 TCX Bright White 96.21 -0.44 1.61 244 245 240
The value which I gave previously is
PANTONE 17-1544 TCX Burnt Sienna 53.75 43.63 28.62 198 93 82
In the new application, on a color button (CColorBtn), i am displaying the colors.
In the old application, they are loading this L, a and b values, converting into color values. for this, they are using some third party, i am not able to go depth in that. color is displayed on some other control, not on button in old application.
Regards,
A. Gopinath.
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Ahhhhh! What you say about them reading in the L-a-b values may very well be the key here - unless of course, it is the exact same library performing the colour-space transformation each time.
I mean, the RGB values are also available in each line and as far as a colour-picker is concerned, are entirely unambiguous. While different monitors/printers may display the same RGB value in a way that appears differently to our eyes and would produce different RGB values if a photograph of the results are compared.
However, the first paragraph from the wikipedia page on Lab color space[^] may possibly hold the key to the different results. It says:
A Lab color space is a color-opponent space with dimension L for lightness and a and b for the
color-opponent dimensions, based on nonlinearly compressed (e.g. CIE XYZ color space) coordinates.
The terminology originates from the three dimensions of the Hunter 1948 color space, which are L,
a, and b.[1][2] However, Lab is now more often used as an informal abbreviation for the L-a-b
representation of the CIE 1976 color space (or CIELAB, described below). The difference between
the original Hunter and CIE color coordinates is that the CIE coordinates are based on a cube root
transformation of the color data, while the Hunter coordinates are based on a square root
transformation. Other examples of color spaces with Lab representations include the CIE 1994
color space and the CIE 2000 color space.
(emphasis mine)
Reading on further, I was reminded that there are a number of systems based on Lab and importantly, they do not all employ the same conversion formula to rgb
I'll bet that if you plug the Lab values (53.75, 43.63, 28.62) given for the colour you mentioned into the different formulas one of them will give you 198,93,82 and another of them will give you 120,27,20
Naturally, the contents of my comment are entirely moot if the exact same code is used to convert from Lab -> RGB and also if the tests are performed on different machines, since RGB values are device-dependant, while Lab values are not.
What a curly problem you have!
"When I was 5 years old, my mother always told me that happiness was the key to life. When I went to school, they asked me what I wanted to be when I grew up. I wrote down 'happy'. They told me I didn't understand the assignment, and I told them they didn't understand life." - John Lennon
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ah, thanks for your reply.
different point of view. will try to by-pass Lab values with RGB instead of conversion.
thanks again.
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You're welcome.
It certainly seems like an avenue of investigation worthy of consideration - one less thing to introduce unnecessary(?) complexity.
"When I was 5 years old, my mother always told me that happiness was the key to life. When I went to school, they asked me what I wanted to be when I grew up. I wrote down 'happy'. They told me I didn't understand the assignment, and I told them they didn't understand life." - John Lennon
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gopi_cpp wrote: Using color picker, for old application What colour picker are you referring to, and how do you select the values?
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Hello Richard,
I am using the colorpic which is downloaded from the link below.
http://www.iconico.com/colorpic/[^]
if you move the mouse over any place, the application will display the color values.
Regards,
A. Gopinath.
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I do not understand. You already have the required values in a text file so why do you need a colour picker.
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This color picker is only for checking the color values.
this is nowhere related with the application.
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So what does any of this have to do with your problem?
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Just need to know that will there be a color difference in visibility with application created in VC++ 6.0 and VC++ 2010.
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