Error Function @ Ordinal 1788 Missing
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(default) Set font size to large Set font size to x-large Set layout to "Jello" (min-width:770px \ max-width:1200px) (default) Set layout to "Fluid" (width: 100%) Set layout to "Fixed" (width: 760px) Place navigation on the right of the screen (default) Place navigation on the left of the screen Close Window Personalize Text Size Medium Font Size (Default) Large Font Size X-Large Font Size Layout Jello Layout Fluid Width Layout Fixed Width Layout Navigation Position Left Navigation Right Navigation Bruce Eitman Windows Embedded Musings (CE/Compact/Standard) << Windows CE: Determining if an https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/aa459142.aspx API is Available | Home | Windows CE: How to Break a System with Two Lines of Code >> Windows CE: ERROR: function @ Ordinal 342 missing You try to run your application on a new Windows CE device for the first time and BAM you get hit with the following debug output: ERROR: function @ Ordinal 342 missing !!! Please Check your SYSGEN variable !!! So http://geekswithblogs.net/BruceEitman/archive/2009/03/23/windows-ce-error-function--ordinal-342-missing.aspx you are wondering what that means. Ordinal? SYSGEN variable? Sounds ominous doesn’t it? The first line says that the function at ordinal 342 is missing. What that means is that a function that your application or DLL plans to call is missing from the OS. If you are new to Windows CE, it is important to understand that Windows CE is a componentized OS, which is just a fancy way to say that some features of the OS can be left out at the OEM’s discretion. In this case, the feature that supports the function at ordinal 342 has been left out of the OS that you are running on. Since I haven’t really answered the question “what does function at ordinal 342 mean?” I better do that. Functions in a DLL can either be identified by their function name, or by a numeric value or ordinal. In the case of many of the DLLs supplied by Microsoft, the functions are identified by their ordinal. The good news for the OEM is that the ordinals can be used to identify the function, but the bad news for application developers is that they can’t. I will look at solutions to that later. The second line says t
searched: Search=1085. In: array Nodes (5), where: Node1=10; Node2=100; Node3=1000; Node4=10000; Node5=20000; In this case Place = 4; EM-----Original Message----- EMFrom: SAS(r) Discussion [mailto: XXXX@XXXXX.COM ] On Behalf Of EMBarz, Ken EMSent: Friday, October http://www.yqcomputer.com/1169_13184_1.htm 27, 2006 11:08 AM EMTo: XXXX@XXXXX.COM EMSubject: Re: Job Security? was Joe Security EM EM>>Programmers can be created by some kind of crash course but not EM>>Statisticians, hence no need to worry. EM EMI'm now several months into cleaning up my third "Rube Goldberg" machine EMof a SAS based data management and reporting application that was EMinitially born and "developed" for years based on this mentality. EM EMThe flip-side of this is that error function I worked my way through grad school in EMstats at a very large high tech company. Out of the several stat/data EMrelated jobs I put in for after graduating, the attitude was: why would EMwe hire you for this when we can just send an engineer to a stats class? Top Function: Ordinal? by harry.droo » Sun, 29 Oct 2006 01:44:35 Use an informat to determine the subscript proc format; error function @ invalue sub '0' - '10' = 1 '10' >- '100' = 2 '100' >- '1000' = 3 '1000' >- '10000' = 4 '10000' >- high = 5; run; data a; array Nodes (5); do i = 1, 100, 1000, 1085; nodes(input(put(i,8.-l),sub.)) = i; end; put (_all_) (=); run; -----Original Message----- From: XXXX@XXXXX.COM [mailto: XXXX@XXXXX.COM ] On Behalf Of Marrufo Garc, Enrique Antonio Sent: 2006, October, 27 12:30 PM To: Barz, Ken; XXXX@XXXXX.COM Subject: Function: Ordinal? Does anybody know how to get the place of a certain value within an array without an iterative process?. For example, Value searched: Search=1085. In: array Nodes (5), where: Node1=10; Node2=100; Node3=1000; Node4=10000; Node5=20000; In this case Place = 4; EM-----Original Message----- EMFrom: SAS(r) Discussion [mailto: XXXX@XXXXX.COM ] On Behalf Of EMBarz, Ken EMSent: Friday, October 27, 2006 11:08 AM EMTo: XXXX@XXXXX.COM EMSubject: Re: Job Security? was Joe Security EM EM>>Programmers can be created by some kind of crash course but not EM>>Statisticians, hence no need to worry. EM EMI'm now several months into cleaning up my third "Rube Goldberg" machine EMof a SAS based data management and reporting application that was EMinitially born and "developed" for years based on this mentality. EM EMThe flip-side of this is that I worked my way through grad school in EMstats at a very large