Away for the Holidays
Hello everyone,
I will be taking some vacation time for the next couple of weeks and therefore will not be responding to any comments during that time. Since comments are moderated (due to spam), they may not show-up until I check them over upon my return.
Merry Christmas and all the best in 2007!
Stefan
Posted by Stefan Cameron on December 20th, 2006
Filed under General
Both comments and pings are currently closed.
Hello Stefan:
I have read your contributions to the Adobe FormBuilder site, and I was hoping that you could help me. I am looking for a consultant for a three-month plus engagement as an Adobe LiveCycle developer in Columbus, OH. Could you please refer me to colleagues of yours who might be looking for a new engagement, or are you avaialble yourself? I am a recruiter with Dedicated Technologies, Inc. in Columbus. I have a more complete job description available, so please let me know if you are interested, and I will be happy to send it to you. Thank you, Stefan.
Sincerely yours,
Cindy Barker
Recruiter
Dedicated Technologies, Inc.
614.460.3200 x.224
cindy.barker@dedicatedtech.com
Cindy,
While I would be very interested in being part of this project in terms of getting an opportunity to get first-hand field experience with some of the products we develop, I am first a software developer. That means I can’t make myself available for prolonged periods of time.
I’m currently looking into whether other Adobe personnel might be able to help out with this project and will let you know as soon as I have an answer.
Hello Stefan
Could you post your mail in here?
I want to send you a form in LiveCycle that I’ve designed, and contain a javascript that populate a dropdown box from a database connection with values.
But the error is “null is not an object”
Please I need help in this
Thank you
Hydar,
That sounds like a JavaScript error. What’s the portion of the script that’s causing the error? If you look in the JavaScript Console (press Ctrl+J while in Preview), there should be a line number associated to the error which would tell you approx. where the error is.