[PD] Subject: can't see objects Pd-0.40.3-extended-20071230-windowsxp-i386.exe

Hans-Christoph Steiner hans at eds.org
Sun Dec 30 19:14:44 CET 2007


On Dec 30, 2007, at 10:08 AM, Ingo Scherzinger wrote:

>
>
>> -----Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----
>> Von: Patrice Colet [mailto:pat at mamalala.org]
>> Gesendet: Sonntag, 30. Dezember 2007 13:23
>> An: Ingo Scherzinger; pd-list at iem.at
>> Betreff: Re: [PD] Subject: can't see objects Pd-0.40.3- 
>> extended-20071228-
>> windowsxp-i386.exe
>>
>> Ingo Scherzinger a écrit :
>>
>>> Eversince 0.40.3- extended certain objects are invisible on my  two
>>> machines (AMD Windows XP SP2).
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Object, Message, Number, Symbol Comment, Graph cannot be seen on  
>>> loading
>>> existing patches or after inserting them from the put menue.
>>>
>>> Array can be put. Values and titel can be seen but no border.
>>>
>>> All other objects can be put, seen and their values can be changed
>>> correctly.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> I know the objects are there because they appear in text mode.
>>>
>>> They also react to the gui since somtimes when I click on certain  
>>> spots
>>> it is printing something.
>>>
>>> I can also move the "invisible" object somwhere else and now when I
>>> click there it is printing the same thing.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> So, what's wrong? How can I fix this?
>>>
>>
>> pd.tk is wrong you can replace it by the older one, or the pd-vanilla
>> version.
>
>
> Thank you for your suggestion. I tried several versions of "pd.tk".
> 0.39 extended, 0.40.2, and 0.41.0 test 10.
>
> It actually made it worse. Before I could see part of the objects.  
> With
> these alternative "pd.tk" files I can't see any objects at all.
>
> Any other ideas?

Could you post a screenshot?  That sounds different from what I am  
seeing.  It might give a clue.  I am limited access to Windows  
machines, and I haven't been able to figure out why this is broken on  
Windows yet works fine on Mac OS X and GNU/Linux.

.hc


------------------------------------------------------------------------ 
----

"[W]e have invented the technology to eliminate scarcity, but we are  
deliberately throwing it away to benefit those who profit from  
scarcity."        -John Gilmore






More information about the Pd-list mailing list