The other difference ( from memory of when I last used them ) is that one cannot override events like methods. The event hook will appear in the subclass. If that event is used in this subclass and this subclass has itself a subclass, then ( far as I can recall ) the event isnt propagated upwards - in other words, if the event is defined in A and subclass B has code in that event, a class C, subclassed from B will not show the event, and therefore cannot choose to override the event with its own version.
On 17/1/07 16:14, "Charles Yeomans" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > method that does nothing but call an event does the very same thing > as a pure virtual method, as far as I can tell. The only difference > is that the event does not require one to supply a nontrivial > implementation. _______________________________________________ Unsubscribe or switch delivery mode: <http://www.realsoftware.com/support/listmanager/> Search the archives of this list here: <http://support.realsoftware.com/listarchives/lists.html>
