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I am guessing that, unlike me, most of you do not often run programs designed for the console screen or command prompt. I am talking about this:
I call your attention to that little rectangle on the screen. That is where I clicked it with my mouse cursor. Get this, clicking the console screen pauses the operation of any program running from the command prompt and, the only way I know to unpause it is to press almost any key on the keyboard. If you accidentally click the console screen and don't notice the little rectangle, you can waste a lot of time. In my case, I run a program that normally takes several days to complete and I have been screwed several times by this Windows 10 feature. Not so with Windows 7.
Having a moment do you have an AMD Ryzen in your computer presently?
You might like to check out extremetech.com
something about not hitting max boost on all cores.
Re: Your cursor issue at “cmd” prompt, what program are you running? Really can’t think of too many programs that are different between 7 & 10.
Froze
not sure your point? WX in use for 3+ years with cmd programs without the issue you're reporting.
What program are you running from your ruz folder?
#VegasStrong
@WebWiseWoman wrote:not sure your point? WX in use for 3+ years with cmd programs without the issue you're reporting.
What program are you running from your ruz folder?
#VegasStrong
There is no "ruz folder" nor do I understand the reference.
@Frozenoem wrote:Re: Your cursor issue at “cmd” prompt, what program are you running? Really can’t think of too many programs that are different between 7 & 10.
Froze
The program is written by me in Visual C++ for training a neural network. Since originally posting about this problem, I have discovered that clicking on the screen only interrupts a program that is printing to the screen and is probably limited to Visual C's printf function. But, as far as I can tell, clicking on the screen always stops the console screen from automatically closing after program completion.
What did you two suppose the purpose of the rectangular thing created by clicking on the screen is? Decoration? I cannot find any documentation of this.
The folder @WebWiseWoman , is referencing is your %username.
As in C:\users\ruz
which does exist
As for your pretty little cursor issue, check your buffer size.
Check your pretty little switches, and I'll return to nursing dayquil.🤣
Froze
@Frozenoem wrote:
The folder @WebWiseWoman , is referencing is your %username.
As in C:\users\ruz
which does exist
As for your pretty little cursor issue, check your buffer size.
Check your pretty little switches, and I'll return to nursing dayquil.🤣
Froze
But, my "username" isn't "ruz". And, why would anyone expect anything of mine to reside in a Microsoft folder?
Although such a folder exists, it is completely empty of personal files. Excuse me, if I forgot about some Microsoft nonsense that I never use. I just remembered that I once tried deleting one of the subfolders and found out I couldn't. Those folders are a nuisance.
You still haven't answered my question, "What do you suppose is the purpose of that rectangle?"
@aruzinsky What program are you running? I just tried to make this happen on mine, my computer has Windows 10 with all updates. The small rectangle did not appear when I clicked on Command Prompt. I don't use it a lot.
@cat0w wrote:@aruzinsky What program are you running? I just tried to make this happen on mine, my computer has Windows 10 with all updates. The small rectangle did not appear when I clicked on Command Prompt. I don't use it a lot.
If you mean what version of Windows, the version number is visible in the screenshot. No program ran in the console that was in my screenshot. The rectangle appears anywhere on the console screen where I click it, not just the command prompt. If I click it again, the old rectangle disappears and a new rectangle appears.
But, now I see where webwiseguy got "C:\users\ruz" which demonstrates one of many reasons why that folder is a big nuisance, more specifically, it draws attention to the irrelevant thereby obfuscating the relevant, much like some posters.
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