Special Notices

This publication is intended to help the customer in the design and implementation of OS/2 Presentation Manager applications under OS/2 Version 2.0, using object-oriented design and programming principles. The information in this publication is not intended as the specification of any programming interfaces that are provided by OS/2 Version 2.0. See the PUBLICATIONS section of the IBM Programming Announcement for OS/2 Version 2.0 for more information about what publications are considered to be product documentation.

References in this publication to IBM products, programs or services do not imply that IBM intends to make these available in all countries in which IBM operates. Any reference to an IBM product, program, or service is not intended to state or imply that only IBM's product, program, or service may be used. Any functionally equivalent program that does not infringe any of IBM's intellectual property rights may be used instead of the IBM product, program or service.

Information in this book was developed in conjunction with use of the equipment specified, and is limited in application to those specific hardware and software products and levels.

IBM may have patents or pending patent applications covering subject matter in this document. The furnishing of this document does not give you any license to these patents. You can send license inquiries, in writing, to the IBM Director of Commercial Relations, IBM Corporation, Purchase, NY 10577.

The information contained in this document has not been submitted to any formal IBM test and is distributed AS IS.

The information about non-IBM ("vendor") products in this manual has been supplied by the vendor and IBM assumes no responsibility for its accuracy completeness.

The use of this information or the implementation of any of these techniques is a customer responsibility and depends on the customer's ability to evaluate and integrate them into the customer's operational environment. While each item may have been reviewed by IBM for accuracy in a specific situation, there is no guarantee that the same or similar results will be obtained elsewhere. Customers attempting to adapt these techniques to their own environments do so at their own risk.

The following document contains examples of data and reports used in daily business operations. To illustrate them as completely as possible, the examples contain the names of individuals, companies, brands, and products. All of these names are fictitious and any similarity to the names and addresses used by an actual business enterprise is entirely coincidental.

The following terms, which are denoted by an asterisk (*) in this publication, are trademarks of the International Business Machines Corporation in the United States and/or other countries: C/2
COBOL/2
Common User Access
CommonView
CUA
DATABASE 2
DB2
DCF
Document Composition Facility
FORTRAN/2
IBM
Macro Assembler/2
Micro Channel
OfficeVision
Operating System/2
OS/2
Personal System/2
Presentation Manager
PS/2
SAA
System/370
Systems Application Architecture
WIN-OS/2
Workplace Shell

The following terms, which are denoted by a double asterisk (**) in this publication, are trademarks of other companies. Intel is a trademark of Intel Corporation.
Lotus is a trademark of the Lotus Development Corporation.
Microsoft is a trademark of Microsoft Corporation.
MS-DOS is a registered trademark of Microsoft Corporation.
Smalltalk/V is a trademark of Digitalk Inc.
Windows is a trademark of Microsoft Corporation.
286, 386, 486, SX are trademarks of Intel Corporation.


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