<HTML><HEAD></HEAD>
<BODY dir=ltr>
<DIV dir=ltr>
<DIV style="FONT-SIZE: 12pt; FONT-FAMILY: 'Calibri'; COLOR: #000000">
<DIV>Hi all:</DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<DIV>I have a called routine that calculates interest in one of my filepro
financial apps.</DIV>
<DIV>It normally runs ok on my Win 7 pro 64 bit system.</DIV>
<DIV>I am running filePro 5.00.00 because that is what my client is
running.</DIV>
<DIV>However, the client is on Windows Vista, and when he tries to use the @key
function that kicks off the called routine, it crashes with a message that
indicates there is not enough tokenization space to run the routine (don’t have
exact message text but I can get it if needed).</DIV>
<DIV>So I changed the menu that starts up the program in which the call is made
and added a –t flag, figuring that I just had to change the tokenization
size. This was done on my computer (Win 7) not his.</DIV>
<DIV>However, no matter what –t nnnnn value I use, that causes my routine (that
works ok without the –t flag) to crash with a message indicating that an
instruction tried to reference low memory. </DIV>
<DIV>Anyone seen this before. I never did clearly understand this
tokenization table stuff.</DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<DIV>Del Neroni</DIV></DIV></DIV></BODY></HTML>