Chip,
No there is no difference. A cursoring key is a cursoring key. The two
liner I gave you to test in Immed also silences cursoring keys in Word.
Doug
Chip Orange wrote:
thanks doug, let me go work up (or down) my code into a managable example.
does it matter at all that I'm doing this in MS Word? would it work
differently than anywhere else? my script where I noticed this is
associated with Word.
thanks.
Chip
-----Original Message-----
From: Doug Geoffray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Thursday, November 12, 2009 1:18 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: onCursorKey not working as described
Chip,
For a very simple example, I typed the following two lines in Immed:
function MyOnCursorKey(a, b, c): MyOnCursorKey=TRUE: End Function x =
ConnectEvent(Application, "OnCursorKey", "MyOnCursorKey")
Once you hit enter on that second line, all cursoring keys go silent.
So this proves returning True will silence cursoring keys. But be warned,
until you shut down this event or restart Immed, you will no longer have any
cursoring keys <smile>.
Doug
Aaron Smith wrote:
On 11/11/2009 6:18 PM, Chip Orange wrote:
how about the example in the onCursorKey documentation?
There is an example there already.
I think it shows you how you can suppress the normal window eyes
speech by returning true, and this is what isn't working for me.
Ah, so you do admit there is an example. <grin> It's working for me.
That's why I asked for a sample from you.
I already know what I'm doing, but I don't know what you're doing.
Aaron