On Jun 16, 2011, at 4:59 AM, Fernand Vanrie wrote:

> On 16/06/2011 10:20, Hal Vaughan wrote:
>> This leads to a couple other questions:
>> 
>> 1) On the CloseDialog() subroutine, if I want to execute it from a button in 
>> the dialog, how can I pass the dialog itself to the routine?
> you can add a listener to the button (using code) or manualy using the GUI to 
> place  a  "event" on the button  who call a macro subroutine

But when I do that, and the listener calls CloseDialog(), how do I make sure 
that particular Dialog object is available to the CloseDialog() subroutine?  I 
tried it as you have it written and at the dialog.setvisible(false) line I got 
an error because the object was not defined.



Hal

>> 2) Is there any way to run a macro when the "X" on the title bar of the 
>> dialog is clicked?
> no,  you can add a listener on closing the dialog or using the the 
> "stetvisible" who avoid the functioning off the X  and you can add a  
> "cancelbuton" who call a sub who close the dialog and do someting more...
>> Thanks!
>> 
>> 
>> Hal
>> 
>> 
>> On Jun 16, 2011, at 3:30 AM, Fernand Vanrie wrote:
>> 
>>> Hal ,
>>> 
>>> Y ou can set a Dialogcontrol visible or not , but we need a timeloop to 
>>> keep it visible
>>> 
>>> i use 2 sub's for open and closing
>>> 
>>> Sub Opendialog
>>> bEnd = false
>>> oDialogcontrol.setvisible(true)
>>> Do
>>> Wait 100  ' keep computer running (should use "wait for key event" if 
>>> existed)
>>> Loop while not bEnd
>>> end sub
>>> 
>>> sub CloseDialog(dialog as object)
>>>  dialog.setvisible(false)
>>>  Bend = true
>>> end sub
>>> 
>>> Hop it Helps
>>>> I've mentioned the sticky-note project I'm working on yesterday in two 
>>>> emails.
>>>> 
>>>> Now I'm running into a problem: I'd like to display a number of 
>>>> sticky-notes, but to display any kind of dialog in BASIC, I need to do 
>>>> something like this:
>>>> 
>>>>    oSticky = createUnoDialog(DialogLibraries.HalLib.StickyNote)
>>>>    oSticky.Execute()
>>>> 
>>>> And the program will stop until I close the dialog, either by the close 
>>>> button, a cancel, or OK, or another button.
>>>> 
>>>> That means the only way to have multiple dialogs open is to open one and 
>>>> from there, open the next, and then open the next and so on.
>>>> 
>>>> Is there some way, from BASIC, to display a dialog and leave it open 
>>>> without it stopping a script?
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> Thank you!
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> Hal--
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