Subj : Re: wow To : Chris Hoppman From : Scott Adams Date : Tue May 27 2003 12:34 am -=> Quoting Chris Hoppman to Mark Lewis <=- ML> ahh... can you depict the flow of the data from the doorgame to the user so ML> can get a better idea? ML> ML> ie: door -> blah -> blah2 -> user CH> door -> telnet app -> gamesrv CH> door writes user input to a file, telnet app reads file, and send that CH> to gamesrv. CH> gamesrv -> telnet app -> door CH> gamesrv sends screens to telnet app, telnet app writes that to a file, CH> the door reads that and display's it to the user. Why would users be sending the high codes though when most keyboard need 2 strokes to generate them in the first place. CH> I have since talked with the maker of a few telnet applications on a CH> programming fourm: www.experts-exchange.com and learned I can just CH> ignore these codes and all will be fine. They are for more advance p2p CH> telnet applications that want to control various factors in the server CH> to fit the client, but for a straight forward client it was okay just CH> to filter them out. They said though if I recieved a #255 filter out CH> the next two chars in the buffer, because #255 is the client/server CH> telling the other c/s that they are about to issue a command. Then the CH> second char is saying you do it or I'll do it. Then the third one sent CH> is what to do. ie #255,#241 #1-(#255Hey I am going to send a CH> command),#241-I will do it,#1-Echo Chars. They said if you just filter CH> it out then the server thinks you will comply. CH> They gave me the list of things. If you would like I can type out CH> that list so if this fourm is archived someone else searching can find CH> it. ML> CH> ps WinCrt know of some good source codes on using it. I ML> CH> did google (wincrt pascal) and that didn't return any ML> CH> usable source. The swag snippets were alomost useable. ML> ML> not sure what you're asking... are you looking for a working wincrt source ML> file? That's what I figured you should just ignore them IMHO. .... "Where you walk, I will walk." - Lennier --- Fringe BBS * Origin: EWOG II - The Fringe - 904-733-1721 (1:112/91) .