I made it the "official" v1.1 for now as it seems to be pretty stable in itself.
Download here:
<http://www.tempel.org/ftp/pub/REALbasic/RBPrjTools1.1.zip>
--
Thomas Tempelmann - exaggerating over a million times a day!
http://www.tempel.org/rb/ -- The primary source of outdated REALbasic
plugins and examples
Skype: tempel.org AIM: superTempel
------ Forwarded Message
From: Ed Kleban <E...@Kleban.com>
Date: Sat, 28 Jan 2006 14:09:40 -0600
To: "RBPrj...@googlegroups.com" <RBPrj...@googlegroups.com>
Thomas,
I just downloaded this. RBPT compiled fine. RBPV got a compile error:
Message: There is no class with this name.
File: MBS REALbasic OSX Plugin
Component: CFSetMBS
Item: List
Independent of figuring out what needs to be fixed here, I'd appreciate it
if you could please post or mail me directly a compiled version for Mac OS
X.
Also, a comment on naming. I still find your dual use of conflicting
names and abbreviations pretty mind boggling. Specifically:
"RB Project Tool" as the name of an app,
"RBProjectTools" which now shows up as the name of a folder containing the
Core and Helpers classes
"RBPrj" is a common prefix for class names
"Readme PrjTools" is yet another variant.
And then there is the mouthful: "RB Prj Vault ExIm".
Might I suggest you standardize on just:
"RB Project Tool" as the name of an app.
"RBPT" as an abbreviation for the app.
That must be a naming conflict with the MBS plugin - my code does not
require any plugins. So, try building it WITHOUT any plugins
installed.
> Also, a comment on naming. I still find your dual use of conflicting
> names and abbreviations pretty mind boggling. Specifically:
>
> "RB Project Tool" as the name of an app,
> "RBProjectTools" which now shows up as the name of a folder containing the
> Core and Helpers classes
They're meant to be descriptive names. Tool is the app, Tools is the
framework for now.
> And then there is the mouthful: "RB Prj Vault ExIm".
>
> Might I suggest you standardize on just:
> "RB Project Tool" as the name of an app.
I do. The Tools is the set of classes used by the Tool.
I'd rather call the set of classes Framework or something, but what the heck.