Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Tron Legacy
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Tron Legacy Post 302508179 by ni2 on Saturday 26th of March 2011 10:46:09 AM
Old 03-26-2011
Tron Legacy

Watched it. Major disappointment.
 

6 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Programming

CMI Legacy

Is there anyone who still uses CMI to connect to the legacy system , my c applications do uses the binaries and libraries for using the CMI functionality but i do not have access to the original source code , and since this is a very old stuff , i just could not get any source to get to knwo the... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: dino_leix
0 Replies

2. Solaris

How to set up legacy services right on Solaris 10

I want to add auto startup and shutdown script to Solaris 10's legacy services as they run in Solaris 9 or in Linux. To make this work, I created the crontrol script in /etc/init.d and then link it to /etc/rc0.d and /etc/rc2.d directories. rc0.d is for shutdown and rc2.d is for srat. After I... (15 Replies)
Discussion started by: duke0001
15 Replies

3. Programming

VERSYS Legacy System

I need help locating the tables that hold the demograhic data in this system on an AIX box. Does anyone know the path? (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Chelcye
0 Replies

4. Solaris

NFS server on Legacy Container?

Hi All, I have a problem as follows. Historically, there was an Ultra10 workstation running Solaris 8 using automount to access NFS volumes on a Solaris 8 server. The Ultra 10 was retired and the Solaris 8 server has been migrated to a Legacy Container (Solaris 8 Branded, whole root,... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: hicksd8
9 Replies

5. Solaris

Determine if you are in a Legacy Zone?

Hi Folks, Just a quick question here, about Legacy Zones. Well more about how to determine if you are actually in one, on logging into a legacy zone - is there a quick way of checking that? Regards Gull04 (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: gull04
7 Replies

6. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Upgrading legacy packages with patch

Hi, All of our production servers are installed with Apache and OpenSSL from source and not yum. My boss has assigned me with a task of upgrading all production servers Apache httpd & openssl to the latest patch from Centos Repo. Is it possible to do this via yum? Please suggest the best... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: anaigini45
10 Replies
tkvars(3)						User Contributed Perl Documentation						 tkvars(3)

NAME
tkvars - Variables used or set by Tk DESCRIPTION
The following perl variables are either set or used by Tk at various times in its execution. (For a list of variables used by perl see perlvar.) $Tk::library This variable holds the file name for a directory containing the modules related to Tk. These modules include an initialization file that is normally processed whenever a Tk application starts up, plus other files containing procedures that implement default behaviors for widgets. The initial value of $Tk::library is set when Tk is added to an interpreter; this is done by searching searching for a directory named Tk in the directory where the file Tk.pm, or the first directory Tk in @INC. The TK_LIBRARY environment variable used by Tcl/Tk is not supported by perl/Tk. Please use @INC to change where modules are searched. Note: This is Tcl remnant. With perl it makes more sense to use @INC and %INC). $Tk::patchLevel Contains a decimal integer giving the current patch level for Tk. The patch level is incremented for each new release or patch, and it uniquely identifies an official version of Tk. Note: this is Tcl remnant. With perl it makes more sense to use $Tk::VERSION described below. $Tk::strictMotif This variable is set to zero by default. If an application sets it to one, then Tk attempts to adhere as closely as possible to Motif look-and-feel standards. For example, active elements such as buttons and scrollbar sliders will not change color when the pointer passes over them. $Tk::VERSION The variable holds the current version number of the perl/Tk release in the form major.minor. Major and minor are integers. The major version number shows on which Tcl/Tk release perl/Tk is based. E.g., 402 means based on Tcls Tk 4.2. (Patchlevel of Tcls Tk are not incorporated because perl/Tk tended to be ``ahead'' of them on some fixes and behind on others. The first digest of the major version number increases in any Tk release that includes changes that are not backward compatible (i.e. whenever existing perl/Tk applications and scripts may have to change to work with the new release). The minor version depends on perl/Tk only. It uses the 'even'='stable', 'odd'='experimental' scheme that linux uses: .0xx - inherently 'alpha' .1xx - experimental 'beta' .2xx - stable .3xx - experimental .4xx - stable ... The minor version number increases with each new release of Tk, except that it resets to zero whenever the major version number changes. $Tk::version The variable holds the current version number of the Tk library in the form major.minor. Major and minor are integers. The major version number increases in any Tk release that includes changes that are not backward compatible (i.e. whenever existing Tk applications and scripts may have to change to work with the new release). The minor version number increases with each new release of Tk, except that it resets to zero whenever the major version number changes. Note: this is Tcl remnant. With perl it makes more sense to use $Tk::VERSION described above. KEYWORDS
variables, version perl v5.16.3 2014-06-10 tkvars(3)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 06:01 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy