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If you use NS 4.7: under the View menu, third section down, Wrap Long
Lines.
Kevin Wampler wrote:
>
> Sander wrote:
>
> > Hello Kevin,
> > The funny thing is that your post also appears as one long line here in
> > Outlook Express 5! What about my post? I'll just add some gibberish so you
> > can judge its length....
>
> Nope, your post looks just fine. I guess I'll just have to fiddle around
> with Netscape and find a way to have it give line breaks every so often
> regardless of the post I was replying to.
--
We are the POVRay of Borg.
Your data has been assimilated into the POVRay
users List of Ages
Resistance is in Ohms.
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Thanks! That was exactly what I was looking for.
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No. Wrong one. Sorry.
What that option really means is "Go ahead and do the incorrect thing when
displaying messages, in direct violation of the RFC's, just because some
programmers out there are too lazy to read the standards, or are trying to force
everyone to switch to proprietary software", but that wouldn't fit on the menu.
Seriously, that's just a display option to correct for broken posts from other
people. (i.e. it treats a symptom upon reciept, not fixes the cause upon sending)
"mr.art" wrote:
> If you use NS 4.7: under the View menu, third section down, Wrap Long
> Lines.
>
> Kevin Wampler wrote:
> >
> > Sander wrote:
> >
> > > Hello Kevin,
> > > The funny thing is that your post also appears as one long line here in
> > > Outlook Express 5! What about my post? I'll just add some gibberish so you
> > > can judge its length....
> >
> > Nope, your post looks just fine. I guess I'll just have to fiddle around
> > with Netscape and find a way to have it give line breaks every so often
> > regardless of the post I was replying to.
>
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Sometimes, all we can do is treat the symptoms.
"Jon A. Cruz" wrote:
> it treats a symptom upon reciept, not fixes the cause upon sending
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"mr.art" wrote:
> Sometimes, all we can do is treat the symptoms.
>
> "Jon A. Cruz" wrote:
> > it treats a symptom upon reciept, not fixes the cause upon sending
Yes, but I choose not to hide the symptoms from myself. That way I can
help inform and enlighten others when they become infected. :-)
How can an addict improve his situation if he does not first realize and
admit that he has a problem?
--
"My new computer's got the clocks, it rocks
But it was obsolete before I opened the box" - W.A.Y.
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"Jon A. Cruz" wrote:
>
> "mr.art" wrote:
>
> > Sometimes, all we can do is treat the symptoms.
> >
> > "Jon A. Cruz" wrote:
> > > it treats a symptom upon reciept, not fixes the cause upon sending
>
> Yes, but I choose not to hide the symptoms from myself. That way I can
> help inform and enlighten others when they become infected. :-)
>
> How can an addict improve his situation if he does not first realize and
> admit that he has a problem?
"Send me lots and lots of money and I will make your problems go away"
said the spider to the fly.
:}
--
Ken Tyler - 1300+ Povray, Graphics, 3D Rendering, and Raytracing Links:
http://home.pacbell.net/tylereng/index.html http://www.povray.org/links/
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Wasn't it Jerry C who wrote:
>Hello,
>
> I'm extremely new to using povray (on BeOS no less), and was messing
>about here and there. Now my experiments have led to something that seems kind
>of interesting but I really could use a mountain range way off in the distance.
>I'm curious as to what would be the best way to accomplish this. Would a height
>field be the trick, or building one by hand (erg...)? Any tips or anything that
>could be shot my way?
I notice that one recent IRTC winner used Terragen to generate the
background mountains, then simply imagemapped the resulting mountains
onto the back wall.
Terragen is very easy to use produces brilliant mountains, and, at this
stage of its development, is free for non-commercial use.
It's at http://www.planetside.co.uk/terragen/
When you glue the results into your POV scene you just need to be a bit
careful to ensure that the lighting directions and atmospheric effects
are reasonably similar.
--
Mike Williams + #
Gentleman of Leisure
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