John wrote: On Jun 3, 2:54 pm, honder <che...@thestadium.com> wrote: John wrote: Hold on a second while I get my boots on... There seems to be a whole lot of BULL SHIT all of a sudden! That is because you live to agitate, and raise the temperature, causing everyone to go off all half cocked. If you see trolling, in asking a question, they I suggest you are just
John wrote: On Jun 3, 12:42 pm, "SmegmaMan" <booli...@aol.com> wrote: I'm sorry but Yankee fans are an embarassment to baseball and sports fans in general. The Yankee newsgroup is essentially abandoned already, it's the first week of June and there are over 100 games left. They have jump ship like drowning rats. Yankee fans are not fans of baseball but fans of winning. What
On Jun 3, 12:42 pm, "SmegmaMan" <booli...@aol.com> wrote: I'm sorry but Yankee fans are an embarassment to baseball and sports fans in general. The Yankee newsgroup is essentially abandoned already, it's the first week of June and there are over 100 games left. They have jump ship like drowning rats. Yankee fans are not fans of baseball but fans of winning. What a bunch of front runners
Samu wrote: With a standard label, I cannot find any simple way to change the color. Amazing! Options seem to be (1) make CMyLabel from scratch, or (2) subclass CStatic I've downloaded some code that does it: http://www.codeguru.com/cpp/controls/staticctrl/article.php/c2909/ I've created my own Test container MFC app, and lifted the core code out of the sample.
With a standard label, I cannot find any simple way to change the color. Amazing! Options seem to be (1) make CMyLabel from scratch, or (2) subclass CStatic I've downloaded some code that does it: http://www.codeguru.com/cpp/controls/staticctrl/article.php/c2909/ I've created my own Test container MFC app, and lifted the core code out of the sample. My code (1) dynamically creates