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Hi Wayne:
As documented in a prior issue of TS Express, you can arrange your windows
by clicking on them in the reverse order you want them shuffled and placed
from upper left to lower right. Then simply click on Windows/Arrahge All and
presto they will be in the order you selected.
At 07:20 PM 4/27/99 -0700, you wrote:
>I just stumbled on to another undocumented, idiosyncratic phenomenon in
>TS 4.0 that can be very useful. I have just started working with the
>Hashnumb dll and needed to have the six windows in my workspace open in
>the correct order so that the execution of the dll's is in the right
>sequence. But when the workspace is closed and reopened the sequence was
>jumbled.
>
>To get the opening sequence you want, the windows must be moved in a
>certain order into the upper left corner. Any window in the open
>workspace can be arrange in the upper left hand corner by making it
>active and clicking on "Arrange All" in the drop down Window menu. It
>will jump to the upper left hand corner. When the workspace closed then
>opened the upper left hand corner window will then be the first out.
>Each window in the open workspace must be moved to the left hand corner
>in the reverse order that you want them to open. Now close the workspace
>and when it is opened they will load in the reverse order they were
>moved into the left corner. That is, last moved, first out.
>
>The order in which the rest of the windows move while you are moving one
>to the left corner is critical. For 6 windows in the sequence below, if
>6 is moved to 1 then 1-goes to-4-to-2-to-5-to-3-to-6. If 5 is moved to 1
>then 1-to-4-to-2-to-5. 3 and 6 don't move.
>
>1 2 3
>4 5 6
>
>The Window drop down menu in charting shows the order in which the
>windows opened (past tense). Number 1 listed is the first to have
>opened, 2 the second,etc. The "Open Workspace" window (F3) shows the
>order in which the symbols will open (future tense), the first listed
>being the first to open.
>
>For more than 6 windows (and TS2000 which seems to open differently) you
>are on your own.
>
>Wayne
>
>
William Brower
Publisher of TS Express
Email: 1000mileman@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Web: http://www.insideedgesystems.com
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