<tt><font size=2><br>
</font></tt>
<br><tt><font size=2>> <br>
> By the way, /qn is deprecated.<br>
> <br>
> /passive is the new equivalent to /qn!, so there is no need to <br>
> specify /qn if you use /passive.</font></tt>
<br><tt><font size=2>> <br>
</font></tt>
<br><tt><font size=2>Citation?</font></tt>
<br>
<br><tt><font size=2>In </font></tt><a href="http://msdn.microsoft.com/de-DE/library/aa367988.aspx"><tt><font size=2 color=blue>http://msdn.microsoft.com/de-DE/library/aa367988.aspx</font></tt></a><tt><font size=2>
and </font></tt><a href="http://msdn.microsoft.com/de-DE/library/aa372024.aspx"><tt><font size=2 color=blue>http://msdn.microsoft.com/de-DE/library/aa372024.aspx</font></tt></a><tt><font size=2>
there's no mention of any deprecation and a quick duckduckgoogle didn't
find anything either.</font></tt>
<br>
<br><tt><font size=2>by the way - /qn! is illegal according to the docs,
only /qb! works, but you don't want /qb in a script.</font></tt>
<br>
<br><tt><font size=2>And back to reality, I did find a few MSIs that actually
needed both /passive and /qn to work correctly. I have no idea what atrocities
the authors put into those MSIs (and I mercily forgot their names). I do
now that having /passive and /qn is redundant but they're still in there
for a reason :)</font></tt>
<br>
<br><tt><font size=2>Best Regards</font></tt>
<br><tt><font size=2> Heiko</font></tt>
<br><tt><font size=2>-</font></tt>