Error during command authentication.
Error - unable to initiate communication with LISTSERV (errno=10061, phase=CONNECT, target=127.0.0.1:2306). The server is probably not started.
On May 26, 2009, at 5:45 PM, Bill Cheeseman wrote: > The technology for doing this is called "GUI Scripting," and it > works by sending AppleScript commands to the System Events > application. That application implements a bunch of AppleScript > commands that know how to control the user interface elements in > running processes. One of those commands is called 'click.' One of > the parameters of the 'click' command is 'at.' According to the > System Events application's AppleScript terminology dictionary, when > you use the AppleScript GUI Scripting command 'click at', you should > use "the { x, y } location at which to click, in global > coordinates." This means you should use the screen coordinates, > where the origin {0, 0} is at the bottom left corner of your main > screen. > Top left. Unlike almost everything else in the world. > The only way to know where a button is located is to ask the > application that owns the button where it is right now. Application > windows can be moved around, and only the application knows where a > button in one of its windows is currently located. You can find this > out with GUI Scripting by asking the System Events application to > tell you where the target application's window is currently located, > and where in that window the button is located. Then you can convert > that location to the global coordinates of the button and use the > 'click at' command. There are a very few applications where gui scripting cannot hit the button. Adobe is infamous for this. > If you don't already know anything about GUI Scripting, you didn't > understand what I just wrote, so you have to do some studying. One > way to start is to download the free 30-day trial version of my > application "PreFab UI Browser." Its help files contain a lot of > information about GUI Scripting, and it helps you compose > AppleScript commands directed to the System Events application. An excellent product. -Mark Surprised at the increase in list volume. It's almost like a new version of Frontier was released.