Joined: Tue May 05, 2009 12:21 pm Posts: 1 Has thanked: 0 time Have thanks: 0 time
hello everybody, I have a doubt.How to link a c++ program with HTML code when we are doing a project i.e the starting is web page it then connects to my c++ coding program. please help me
ThanQ
biskot188
Question subject: Re: doubt
Posted: Sun May 10, 2009 12:25 am
Joined: Fri Nov 21, 2008 6:18 pm Posts: 51 Location: thessaloniki Has thanked: 0 time Have thanks: 2 time
search in google for 3schools there are a lot about html there are examples you can read..
_________________ if you want make an effort yourself no one will make it for you... best regards
julie20099
Question subject: Re: doubt
Posted: Sun May 10, 2009 12:19 pm
Joined: Tue Apr 28, 2009 11:13 am Posts: 10 Has thanked: 0 time Have thanks: 0 time
It's always a risk when writers direct their own work, since some playwrights don't travel well from stage to screen. Aided by Roger Deakins, of No Country for Old Men fame, who vividly captures the look of a blustery Bronx winter, Moonstruck's John Patrick Shanley pulls it off. If Doubt makes for a dialogue-heavy experience, like The Crucible and 12 Angry Men, the words and ideas are never dull, and a consummate cast makes each one count. Set in 1964 and loosely inspired by actual events, Shanley focuses on St. Nicholas, a Catholic primary school that has accepted its first African-American student, Donald Miller (Joseph Foster), who serves as altar boy to the warm-hearted Father Flynn (Phillip Seymour Hoffman). Donald may not have any friends, but that doesn't worry his mother, Mrs. Miller (Viola Davis in a scene-stealing performance), since her sole concern is that her son gets a good education. When Sister James (Amy Adams) notices Flynn concentrating more of his attentions on Miller than the other boys, she mentions the matter to Sister Aloysius Beauvier (Meryl Streep), the school's hard-nosed principal. Looking for any excuse to push the progressive priest out of her tradition-minded institution, Sister Aloysius sets out to destroy him, and if that means ruining Donald's future in the process--so be it. Naturally, she's the least sympathetic combatant in this battle, but Streep invests her disciplinarian with wit and unexpected flashes of empathy. Of all the characters she's played, Sister Aloysius comes closest to caricature, but she never feels like a cartoon; just a sad woman willing to do anything to hold onto what little she has before the forces of change render her--and everything she represents--redundant. --Kathleen C. Fennessy