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The LA Fox Developer Newsletter
October 1997
Microsoft Office 97
Service Release I
The Office 97 Service Release I (SR-I) makes it easier for
users of different versions of Office to share files with one
another. In particular, SR-I includes the Word 6.0/95 Binary
Converter for Word 97, which enables Word 97 users to save
riles in the Word 6.0/95 native file format. SR-I also delivers
enhanced support for POP3 and SMTP Internet e-mail in the
Outlook (tm) 97 desktop information manager, the new Microsoft
access Snapshot, support for Intel’s MMX technology, and
various new viewers, converters and other minor enhancements
an updates.

If you have not previously downloaded the Office 97 SR-I Patch:
Please go to the Office 97 SR-I Patch download page. If you
downloaded the Office 97 SR-I Patch prior to 8/I 6/97: Please
download the Office 97 SR-I Patch Update which will bring your
previously installed Office 97 SR-I Patch up to date.

Unsure of which patch file to install? Download and run the
Office 97 SR-I Patch Version Checker to find out. (Because the
Version Checker looks for updated Word 97 files, this requires
that you have the U.S. English version of Word 97 already
installed on your machine.)

The U.S. English Office SR-I Patch doesn’t install the E-mail
Forms Fix Utility properly. If you use both the Microsoft Outlook
97 and Microsoft Exchange mail clients on the same -machine
and need to switch between them, you may want to download
and install the E-mail Forms Fix Utility after installing the SR-I
Patch. You should consider installing this utility even if you’ve
installed Outlook but haven’t begun using it yet and use the
Exchange client instead. However, you don’t need the E-mail
Forms Fix Utility if you’ve upgraded permanently to Outlook
(and will never need to switch back to the Exchange client), or if
you installed SR-I from the CD, rather than downloading it from
this site.
For product support, please visit http://www.microsoft.com/
MSOfficeSupport/.

© 1997 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.


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Popups (Con’t from page 3)
make it execute again after a failure. Using a separate state-
ment like CNTBARO is easier to follow.
Notice that I placed the code restoring the old error handler
immediately after the line that might generate the expected
error. This reduces the risk of encountering some other error
while the temporary handler is in place. For instance, if the error
handler hadn’t been restored when the DEFINE BAR statement
was executed, and the DEFINE BAR statement had a typo in it,
the error handler would just set IlPopupOK to .f. and go on
without alerting the user.

This technique is useful in a variety of contexts other than
looking for pop-ups. For cases where it’s impossible (or just a
lot of work!) to check whether a statement will produce an error,
it’s often easier to set up a temporary error handler and give it a
try. Just be sure to leave a comment in your code so you can
remember why it works!

[Ed. Note: This tip first appeared in Fox Talk.)
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