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The LA Fox Developer Newsletter
June 1998
Hot Tip...
Laying Out Reports
by John Porter Hart, LA Fox
At the May meeting, I mentioned that I had had some success
getting users to lay out their own messy reports. Bill Anderson
thought that might be something of interest to the group.

The technique is fairly simple (for the developer):

1. The user lays out the report in MS Word with all the lines,
boxes, etc. they require. They’ve all had a lot of practice with
this because of changing word processors, reorgs, and a recent
sale of the company. Most departments have a local Word
wizard--many of whom insist I can’t possibly do justice to their
masterpiece.

2. I take their .doc file and either embed it in a general field or
link it (allowing user to change “constant” data without bothering
me).

3. I include the general field in the report as an OLE object--
essentially it’s wallpaper.

4. I then lay the header, detail, etc. data on the report & fiddle
with it until it fits right (the report preview in 2.6 misregisters the
general field with respect to the report data...).

The report is now done and will print satisfactorily on any
Windows printer. Everything in the report--both form and con-
tent--gets printed at the resolution set for the particular printer.

Nothing gets the jaggies unless the user has imported a screen-
resolution .bmp into the .doc file. Even then, it looks no worse
than when it prints from Word. Anybody have a solution for this?

Each user must have access to Word at runtime even though
they can’t tell FoxPro is using it.


[Ed. Note: John will be giving a short demonstration of this
technique at the beginning of this Monday’s meeting.J


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code of "OICU812" in the lower right-hand corner of the registra-
tion form. If you use this in conjunction with the B.A.F. program,
you could realize substantial cost savings.
Spam Alert!!


Unsolicited commercial e-mail (spam) is a serious problem on
the Internet. If you’ve been using the Internet for awhile, it’s
probably been showing up in your mailbox. If you’re new to the
Internet, rest assured that as you branch out and explore the
‘Net, advertisers will get your e-mail address. You’ll soon start
receiving get rich quick schemes, ads for sex or sex sites (and,
no, you don’t have to visit such a site to start getting advertising
from them!), ads for various types of software, etc, etc, etc. Not
only is this a bother for you and a waste of your time, it also
costs you money. E-mail advertising (spamming) is of almost
no cost to the advertisers, but takes storage space on your
ISPs server and consumes Internet bandwidth. All of this
translates into hard dollars, which then will be passed on to you
in the form of higher costs. This is a serious problem now and
will become worse in the future.

A similar problem with fax advertising cropped up a few years
ago. Marketers started acquiring fax phone numbers and
flooding fax machines with faxed advertisements. Again, this
was a waste of the recipient’s time and money. A great deal of
my own fax paper was wasted on worthless, unwanted adver-
tisements. Fortunately, Congress outlawed unsolicited fax
advertising in the 1991 Telephone Consumer Protection Act and
placed a $500 to $1500 fine on it. Additionally, the recipient
could enforce the law by filing in a local court instead of having
to rely on the government to move against anyone breaking the
law. This has almost completely stopped fax advertising.

Certain groups (one being the Coalition Against Unsolicited
Commercial E-Mail [CAUCE at http://www.cauce.org]) have
[Ed. Note: This is a subject that affects just about anyone that
goes on the Internet. It’s a subject of epic proportion...! call it
‘The Virtual Disease of the 90’s and Beyond". Contributors are
listed at the end of this article.J
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