Version 6.3.13 for Windows
 —  Programming Guide  —

How To Define Dialog Elements

This document covers the following topics:


Introduction

Dialog elements are uniquely identified by a handle. A handle is a binary value that is returned when a dialog element is created. A handle must be defined in a DEFINE DATA statement of the dialog.

You can define a handle

Note:
Handles of ActiveX controls are defined in a slightly different way than the standard handle definition described below. This is described in Working with ActiveX Controls.

A handle is defined inside a DEFINE DATA statement in the following way:

level handle-name [(array-defintion)] HANDLE OF dialog-element-type

Handles may be defined on any level.

Handle-name is the name to be assigned to the handle; the naming conventions for user-defined variables apply.

Dialog-element-type is the type of dialog element. Its possible values are the values of the TYPE attribute. It may not be redefined and not be contained in a redefinition of a group.

Examples:

1 #SAVEAS-MENUITEM HANDLE OF MENUITEM 
1 #OK-BUTTON (1:10) HANDLE OF PUSHBUTTON

When you have defined a handle, you can use the handle-name with handle attribute operands in those Natural statements where an operand may be specified. With handle attribute operands, you can, for example, dynamically query, set, or modify attribute values for the defined dialog-element-type. This is the most important programming technique in the dialog editor. For details, see the section How To Manipulate Dialog Elements.

If there is a dialog element handle of the same name in two different dialogs, the PARENT attribute ensures that Natural knows the difference between the two handles (two different PARENT values). Handles may be passed as parameters or may be assigned from one handle variable to another.

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HANDLE OF GUI

In addition to the handle types referring to one dialog element, the generic handle type HANDLE OF GUI is available. In event-handler code, you can use HANDLE OF GUI to refer to the handle of any type of dialog element.

This can be useful, for example, if you are querying an attribute value in all dialog elements on one level: you go through the dialog elements one after the other; in the course of this query, it is not clear which type of dialog element is going to be queried next. Then a GUI handle makes it possible to query the next dialog element regardless of its type. This saves a lot of coding, because otherwise, you would have to query the attribute's value of each dialog element separately.

Example:

... 
1 #CONTROL HANDLE OF GUI 
... 
#CONTROL := #DLG$WINDOW.FIRST-CHILD 
REPEAT UNTIL #CONTROL = NULL-HANDLE 
  ... 
  #CONTROL := #CONTROL.SUCCESSOR 
END-REPEAT

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NULL-HANDLE

The HANDLE constant NULL-HANDLE may be used to query, set or modify a NULL value of a HANDLE. Such a NULL value means that the dialog element is nonexistent (even if it has been created explicitly).

Example:

DEFINE DATA PARAMETER 
  1 #PUSH HANDLE OF PUSHBUTTON 
END-DEFINE 
... 
IF #PUSH = NULL-HANDLE 
...

The HANDLE constant NULL-HANDLE represents the NULL value of a HANDLE variable or of an attribute with format HANDLE. For handle variables, the value indicates that the expression handle.attribute refers to the global attribute list. For attributes, this value indicates that no value is currently set.

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