Those all look wrong to me. Try this:
response.write "<a href='mailto:" & recordset1.fields.item("email").Value & "'> TO email click here </a>"
If you still get a blank after mailto: then the field in the database is blank.
Well I fixed it... I'm not really sure what I did. I started a brand new project(s) and pasted in my code. I guess I fouled up the link settings somehow. It must have been using some debug versions of default libraries or something. Horray!
File Size: 45k, btw
NOTE: In no step along the way am I outputting DEBUG info
The setup:
I created a static library with a single, simple class in it:
class xTest
{
int Test() { return 1; }
}
I compile the LIB file and all is well. Then I create a Win32 project which imports my xTest.lib. It does a few things...
Thats a great idea.. although I don't necessarily have long ints, they could be short ints or chars. But thats easy to allow for. I could assume that it is always little-endian (intel) and just write my bytes backwards, that would be fine UNLESS theres a lot of machines out there that are...
UGH... thanx for bring me sanity. But I'm not sure knowing the problem helps me much. I'm writing a DirectX application, and the array I'm recieving is the memory space of a direct draw surface. Because of the nature of the problem, I wont know until run time if I have an array of bytes, words...
The problem is I have an int array, and I need to convert it to a char array so that I can get one byte at a time from it. This is what I tried:
int *i = new int[10];
i[0] = 1;
i[1] = 2;
i[2] = 3; //etc
char *c = (char *) i;
after doing this, this is what I would expect:
c[0] == 0
c[1] == 0...
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