1.0.0 • Published 1 year ago

vw_code_calculator_v1_exe_psb6 v1.0.0

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1 year ago

VW Code Calculator V1.exe

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this is a simple calculator that can perform certain calculations like:  - addition - subtraction - multiplication - division - concatenation - min, max, and average values.     q: how to change the color of a section of an image? i have the following image: the section highlighted in red is what i want to change the color of. is there a way to do that? a: for whatever reason you want to do this, you're probably better off using a gimp scripting extension to do it. also, i wouldn't necessarily call it "a section", in your example. i don't know of any good open-source or free scripting extensions for doing what you want. in the past i've built some fairly robust but non-open-source-and-free-extensions for doing some similar things. here's one example: you can find some other examples here: in general you can do it with python or some other scripting language by capturing the image and defining the pixels you want to change by their coordinates. then, you can modify the pixels to whatever you want. see this page for some examples: there are other tools besides gimp that can do this, but this will be the easiest. q: how to find out if a device is compatible with my existing setup i know some apps like tasker can run on various devices. i don't know how they can do it. i know that apps can be installed from apk files. is there a way to find out if my existing setup is compatible with any of the available apps? or how can i find out a good user interface for my existing setup? i am talking about android here. a: this would be a job for reverse engineering. start with the source code of your app. use the package manager to figure out what devices it supports. the main problem you have to solve is that the installed packages don't necessarily install the same system as the phone, and it's usually quite hard to figure out the differences. i would suggest trying to install a dummy package that you can easily test to see if it works. that's not the only problem, though, because you also have to take into account that an app might support multiple devices and that different versions of the app might have different hardware requirements. if you think it's too much work to figure all this out, there's always the obvious answer: just install an app on your device and see if it works. a: you will need to do a bit of work. so far, only robovm and react native seem to have an easy solution for this. i am not sure if the others have one or not. react native needs to know what the device supports, and it knows that from a manifest file and a few things it reads from the device. robovm needs to know what the device supports, and it knows that from the processor and the abi. 84d34552a1