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Anonymous
en respuesta a: Anonymous

I'm sorry I misunderstood how you had written your program. Another way to move it to it's own file is to open it up in any text editor. I usually just use notepad, go to edit at the top of the screen do a find and search for finish. it should pop up even before you have finished typing. Do a copy and paste to another file and save as your finish step. You may need to add lines to the beginning of the program to call up machine parameters (I like to call it startup lines) before the tool call. These can be copied and pasted from the other program as well. When you do the copy just place the cursor at the start point of the code to be copied or cut then scroll down to the bottom and hold the shift key down and click at the end. this will select all text in between then right click copy or cut and paste into a blank open text editor. It still will only take a couple of minutes. I have to break up programs all the time that don't fit my machines memory and have found this to be the easiest way to do it. Many times I have to break programs in the middle of operations when surface milling, and this works great for me. Don't know if it's the most conventional way but it works.