953,649 Members — Technology Publication meets Social Media
Username:
Password:
Lost login information?
Have something to say? Contribute New Article Reply to this Article

Introduction

Greetings!

My name is Waylena, and I'm a bit of a techie living with my husband and our two cats in Champaign, IL.

I use Windows a lot at work, but Linux is my passion, and has inspired me to take up some programming. So far I've learned a lot of html and some C.

Still very much an enthusiastic newbie, but I find my knowledge growing all the time.

I read about the site on JustLinux site. Looks great, I'll add it to my personal toolbar. :)

-Waylena

waystar
Newbie Poster
2 posts since Dec 2003
Reputation Points: 10
Solved Threads: 0
 

Hello waystar! Enjoy your stay. Good luck with your programming endeavors.

cscgal
The Queen of DaniWeb
Administrator
19,397 posts since Feb 2002
Reputation Points: 1,474
Solved Threads: 228
 

Hi waystar- looks like more than a few of us from JL came over to check this out. :)

DMR
Wombat At Large
Team Colleague
7,229 posts since Dec 2003
Reputation Points: 221
Solved Threads: 370
 

I'll throw my hat in-- Woo Woo!

Here, I'm alc6379. At justlinux.com, I'm Alex Cavnar, aka alc6379, the "Cookie Moderator"! I'd've used the same nickname here, but most forums don't like my long username.

Glad to be here, and I hope I can help somebody!

alc6379
Cookie... That's it
Team Colleague
2,820 posts since Dec 2003
Reputation Points: 186
Solved Threads: 147
 

'lo there. :)

rixius
Posting Whiz in Training
233 posts since Nov 2003
Reputation Points: 12
Solved Threads: 3
 
I'll throw my hat in-- Woo Woo!

Hey, Who told you that you could clock out? Get back to work!

;)

DMR
Wombat At Large
Team Colleague
7,229 posts since Dec 2003
Reputation Points: 221
Solved Threads: 370
 

welcome to the forum :mrgreen:

big_k105
PFO Founder
Team Colleague
357 posts since May 2003
Reputation Points: 36
Solved Threads: 2
 

Well hello and welcome to techtalk.

Enjoy your stay and happy posting :)

peterska2
Junior Poster
100 posts since Nov 2003
Reputation Points: 10
Solved Threads: 0
 

Hey waystar, DMR, and alc ... all from justlinux.com :) We could really use your help with our Linux 'n' shell scripting forums over here! :)

cscgal
The Queen of DaniWeb
Administrator
19,397 posts since Feb 2002
Reputation Points: 1,474
Solved Threads: 228
 
Hey waystar, DMR, and alc ... all from justlinux.com .

You missed one- Steve (mahdi) registered also. OMG- three moderators posting on another site when we should be slaving away at JL... our site admin isnot going to be a happy puppy!

:evil: :cheesy:

DMR
Wombat At Large
Team Colleague
7,229 posts since Dec 2003
Reputation Points: 221
Solved Threads: 370
 

Tell him that I stole you guys away :P and I'll fight for ya if I have to! LOL j/k

cscgal
The Queen of DaniWeb
Administrator
19,397 posts since Feb 2002
Reputation Points: 1,474
Solved Threads: 228
 
Tell him that I stole you guys away :P and I'll fight for ya if I have to! LOL j/k

Not trying to be coy or anything, but the admin of this board isWAY cuter than our admin... ;)

alc6379
Cookie... That's it
Team Colleague
2,820 posts since Dec 2003
Reputation Points: 186
Solved Threads: 147
 

hehe! :)

cscgal
The Queen of DaniWeb
Administrator
19,397 posts since Feb 2002
Reputation Points: 1,474
Solved Threads: 228
 

:@ I'm late it's Tu.06.19.07; Justin!!!

'--Functions--

local fn hello
cls
window 1, "Hello, World", (0,0)-(512,320),_dialogmovable,classa
text _monaco,9
end fn

local fn pr
do
print "Hello, World!"
until len(inkey$) or mouse(_down)
end fn

'--Main--
fn hello
fn pr


:-/ Communicating inside a single program is trivial: one method calls another, the result comes back, and the calling method continues. If anything goes wrong, an exception is thrown. If the program aborts altogether, both caller and callee share the same fate, making the interaction an all-or-nothing affair. This kind of binary outcome is a welcome behavior in the predictive world of computer software, especially one that’s based on 1s and 0s. Given the challenges in creating a correct conversation policy, one approach would be to simply enumerate a few common conversations and have services choose which to implement. WSDL follows this approach with the concept of message-exchange patterns (MEPs). WSDL 1.1 defines four transmission primitives, comprising sequences of input and output operations: one-way, request–response, solicit–response, and notification.2 WSDL 2.0 defines additional MEPs, and lets services define their own.3 Yet, the WSDL specification doesn’t include a language to describe the conversation policy associated with each MEP; it uses plain English, which means that humans have to interpret and implement these policies. “Web Services Description Language (WSDL), version 2.0 part 2::icon_rolleyes:

akela_p501usa
Newbie Poster
5 posts since Jun 2007
Reputation Points: 27
Solved Threads: 0
 

This article has been dead for over three months

Post: Markdown Syntax: Formatting Help
You