to magnify a specimen you see the eye piece of the microscope ...
no there macro witch means that you can see it with your eye
macro is huge, micro is tiny. Think of a big mac as opposed to microscopic.
Microchips in a computer large or small are just that - microscopic sized silicon.
Draw a button on your sheet, by going to the View menu and picking Toobars and then the Forms toolbar and drawing your button. It will immediately ask you to connect a macro to it and then you can choose your macro. Then when the button is clicked the macro will run.
Paul A. Pangaro has written: 'An examination and confirmation of a macro theory of conversations through a realization of the protologic Lp by microscopic simulation'
John Maxwell Robeson has written: 'The macro- and microscopic anatomy of Dalyellia triangulata, nov. sp. ..' -- subject(s): Dalyellia triangulata
One possibility is in term of -scopic or seeing. Macroscopic organisms can be see with the unaided eye. Microscopic organisms require a microscope or some other means of visual magnification.
Calling a macro loads the macro into memory, while executing the macro runs the macro.
I think it is that macroscopic you can see and microscopic you cannot see
Nested macro calls refer to the macro calls within the macros. A macros is available within other macro definitions also. In the scenario when a macro call occurs, which contains another macro call, the macro processor generates the nested macro definition as text and places it on the input stack. The definition of the macro is then scanned and the macro processor complies it.
Nested macro calls refer to the macro calls within the macros. A macros is available within other macro definitions also. In the scenario when a macro call occurs, which contains another macro call, the macro processor generates the nested macro definition as text and places it on the input stack. The definition of the macro is then scanned and the macro processor complies it.
The macro content.