What if you looked for your cursor key and just put a sleep statement to have your script pause for a tenth of a second or so and then go on. By this point, the application has most likely acted upon the key.




J.J> Meddaugh - ATGuys.com
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----- Original Message ----- From: "Ralf Kefferpuetz" <[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Sunday, November 14, 2010 10:17 AM
Subject: Keyboard.RegisterCursorKey question


Hello all,

as far as I understand it right the Keyboard.RegisterCursorKey  fireds the
function, before  the cursorKey is passed to the application. Do we have
something similar to Keyboard.RegisterCursorKey, but it should fire up after
the  key is passed to the application?

Many thanks,
 Ralf

Ralf Kefferpuetz
* Germany
* MSN/Live: [email protected] * Aim: RalfKatEMC * Skype/Yahoo:
rkefferpuetz7747 *




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