The part that pissed me off so much about that fight, was the 2 minute run back in to action... why wouldn't they set the checkpoint after that run and dialogue... beats me
It broke a CSS based menu I had that was based on this:
http://www.alistapart.com/articles/horizdropdowns
The part that broke it just needed to be taken out:
ul li {
position: relative;
}
IE7 actually BROKE my menus... they worked fine in IE6 and FF, but now, mousing over the UL element does nothing, you have to mouse over the text in the element
This certainly isn't me being lazy. This is me taking action after months of posting signs, warning users, kicking users out, etc etc.
I am sick and tired of poking my head up, seeing something might be going on, and by the time I get there, the window has been closed. Some of the things...
So I run a computer lab at a university, and I need a way to visually see what the user is seeing on their screen from my computer. The problem I have here, is that people tend to look at inappropriate stuff and by the time I am able to walk around and see it, they have already closed/minimized...
my guild has been killing him for almost 8 months now...
your strat is the same as ours except we take two down to 10%, not 20%... works well for us. hell, half of us are afk for the fight
Instead of querying the subform itself, try and query the subform object.
Say you have the following:
frmParent
frmSubform
frmParent has the subform object: sfrmSubform
Try to query:
[frmParent]![sfrmSubform].Requery
uhh I drove 30 miles away to arrive at a Walmart two hours before they were going to release World of Warcraft... I can't possibly see myself doing that for any other game
well, you aren't actually using the 'con' variable anywhere.
you might want to think about creating an actual stored update query and calling that on a button press
I've been developing with Microsoft Visual Web Developer 2005 Express Edition Beta... Yah it might be in beta along with ASP.NET 2.0, but it works great for what I need