On Jan 27, 2007, at 10:19 AM, Aliacta wrote:
The problem would then be that you'd have to interpret the
columnWidth property which is just a comma delimited string that
can take many formats.
No you don't... you use: Listbox.Column(column).WidthActual
Hi karen,
You're obviously right.
So depending on Jim's preferences and needs, he can follow your
suggestion and do it on a column by column basis, which implies he
needs to store the width of each separate column in separate
properties (or in an array) but gives him total control, or he can
follow my suggestion which doesn't give total knowledge of what's
going on but which has only one extra property to manage.
My approach would be nice for storing preferences, yours is perfect
for checking things like exceeding maximum or minimum width that you
want a particular column to have.
Of course he can mix both methods which would cover any need I can
think of right now.
Cheers,
Marc
_______________________________________________
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>