Microsoft KB Archive/109100

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SUMMARY
Note: "Microsoft Systems Journal" does not make any representation or warranty, expressed or implied, with respect to any code or other information herein. "Microsoft Systems Journal" disclaims any liability whatsoever for any use of such code or other information.

This article lists the filenames and Snumbers for files available from online services that contain the source code described in articles published in the February 1993 issue of the "Microsoft Systems Journal."

FILES AVAILABLE FROM ONLINE SERVICES
Item ID  Filename       Description ---         ---

S14490   92W32QA.EXE    The 92W32QA.EXE file contains the source code for the "Win32 Q & A" column by Jeffrey Richter.

S14491   92WINQA.EXE    The 92WINQA.EXE file contains the source code for the "Windows Q & A" by Matt Pietrek.

S14492   CQA.EXE        The CQA.EXE file contains the source code for the "C/C++ Q & A" column by Paul DiLascia.

S14493   CHICTIPS.EXE   The CHICTIPS.EXE file contains the source code for the article named "Seventeen Techniques for                        Preparing Your 16-Bit Applications for Chicago," by Dave Edson.

Chicago is packed with new features, and that means changes in the way you program. We present two lists: one details things to do now in your 16-bit Windows(tm)-based apps; the other contains changes that you'll implement in the future but should plan for now.

S14494   VBA.EXE        The VBA.EXE file contains the source code for the article named "Application Interoperability with                        Visual Basic for Applications and OLE 2.0," by                         Joshua Trupin.

Through Visual Basic(r) for Applications and OLE 2.0 embedding and automation, Microsoft has provided programmers and end users with rich new tools for cross-application development. Joshua Trupin investigates this functionality with two sample programs.

S14495   OWL.EXE        The OWL.EXE file contains the source code for the article named "Putting the OWL 2.0 Class Library                        for Windows Through Its Paces," by Ted Faison.

One of the best features of OWL 2.0 is its clean object-oriented design. Version 2.0 incorporates many features that further simplify application development. Support has been added for custom controls, dialog boxes as main windows, toolbars, GDI, and much more.

INSTRUCTIONS FOR DOWNLOADING
Release Date: February 1994

For more information about how to download files from the Microsoft Software Library, please see the following article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:

"Q119591 How to Obtain Microsoft Support Files from Online Services" Additional query words:

Keywords         : kbfile kbDSupport Version          : Platform         : WINDOWS Issue type       : kbinfo
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