Path: utzoo!attcan!uunet!samsung!uakari.primate.wisc.edu!dali.cs.montana.edu!milton!phaedrus From: phaedrus@milton.u.washington.edu (Mark Phaedrus) Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.system Subject: Re: DA memory problem Message-ID: <9350@milton.u.washington.edu> Date: 16 Oct 90 17:41:43 GMT References: <13397@june.cs.washington.edu> Distribution: na Organization: University of Washington, Seattle Lines: 33 In article <13397@june.cs.washington.edu> georgew@june.cs.washington.edu (Georges Winkenbach) writes: >I tried to use the GCC Print Envelope DA on a mac II ci >running multifinder. Every time I try to print an envelope, >the DA comes back, after a while, with an "error, not >enough memory" alert box. I have 8meg of memory. I have >also successfully printed more complex documents from >within applications. > >Any idea as to what I'm doing wrong? Is there a way to >fix the amount of memory a DA is allowed to use under >mac OS (and multifinder)? >... >P.S. I'm relatively new to the mac world; I hope this is > not a dumb question. Not a dumb question at all. Under MultiFinder, DAs run under a special application called DA Handler; and, like other applications, it gets a certain amount of memory. Unfortunately, the default amount is something ridiculously small (16K, I believe), and Finder doesn't let you change it. To see if this is the problem, try holding down the Option key while you open the DA; this uses the current application's memory pool instead of DA Handler's. If it works then, you need to fix DA Handler. The only way I know of to fix it is to use ResEdit; you should be able to get a copy from a dealer or user group. From ResEdit, open the "DA Handler" file in the System Folder, open its "SIZE" resource, scroll down to the "Size" field at the end of the resource, and type in some more sensible number (like 64000 or 80000) there in place of the 16000. If you don't feel comfortable doing this, you could probably find some Mac wiz at your site to do it for you. (Come to think of it, *I'm* from your site... :) ) -- Internet: phaedrus@u.washington.edu (University of Washington, Seattle) The views expressed here are not those of this station or its management. "If you can keep your head while those about you are losing theirs, consider an exciting career as a guillotine operator!"