This document covers the following topics:
To manipulate dialog elements, Natural provides you with handle attribute operands. You use handle attribute operands wherever an operand may be specified in a Natural statement. This is the most important programming technique in event-handler code.
Wichtig:
You must have defined a handle.
Anmerkung:
ActiveX controls are manipulated in a slightly different way than
the standard way described below. This is described in
Working with ActiveX
Controls.
Handle attribute operands may be specified as follows:
handle.name - attribute.name [(index-specification)] |
The handle-name is the handle of the
dialog-element-type as defined in the
HANDLE
definition of the DEFINE DATA
statement.
The attribute-name is the name of an attribute which has to be valid for the dialog-element-type of the handle.
Examples:
1 #PB-1 HANDLE OF PUSHBUTTON /* #PB-1 is a handle-name of the /* dialog-element-type PUSHBUTTON RESET #PB-1.STRING... /* #PB-1.STRING is the handle attribute operand /* where STRING is a valid attribute-name of the /* dialog-element-type PUSHBUTTON 1 #RB-1(1:5) HANDLE OF RADIOBUTTON /* #RB-1 is an array of five RADIOBUTTONs IF #RB-1.CHECKED(3) = CHECKED /* If the third radio-button control is THEN... /* checked ...
In most applications, it will be necessary
to set an attribute value before creating the dialog element,
to modify the value after creating the dialog element, and
to query an attribute value.
In some cases, it may be necessary to modify and query some attributes during processing, for example to query the checked/not checked state of a radio-button control or to disable (= modify) a menu item.
You can do that, for example, in the ASSIGN
,
MOVE
or
CALLNAT
statements.
Examples:
1 #PB-1 HANDLE OF PUSHBUTTON /* #PB-1 is a handle-name of the ... /* dialog-element-type PUSHBUTTON #PB-1.STRING:= 'MY BUTTON' /* Set or modify the value of the STRING /* attribute to 'MY BUTTON' #TEXT:= #PB-1.STRING /* Query the value of the STRING attribute /* and assign the value to #TEXT CALLNAT 'SUBPGM1' #PB-1.STRING /* Query the value of the STRING attribute /* and pass it on to the subprogram
When you use the handle-name variable only on the left side of the statements, as in the first of the three examples above, the attribute value is set or modified, that is, it is assigned the value of the specified operand.
When you use the handle-name variable on the right side of the statements, as in the second example, the attribute value is queried, that is, the value is assigned to the operand.
Once a handle has been defined (either explicitly in specified Natural code, or implicitly with the dialog editor), it can be used with most Natural statements. However, only a specific set of attributes can be queried, set or modified for a particular dialog element. To find out which values an attribute can have, see the section Attributes in the Dialog Component Reference.
Although an exact data type is specified for the values of most attributes, it is sufficient to supply move-compatible values to a handle attribute operand. The rules are the same as those for Natural variables.
Handle attribute operands must not be used in the following statements:
AT BREAK
,
FIND
,
HISTOGRAM
,
INPUT
,
READ
,
READ WORK FILE
.
User-defined variables can be used instead.
If you assign numeric operands to alphanumeric attributes, the values of these attributes will be in a non-displayable format. The Natural arithmetic assignment rules apply.
If you need a displayable format, you can use
MOVE EDITED
.
Examples:
#PB-1.STRING:= -12.34 /* Non-displayable format MOVE EDITED #I4 (EM = -Z(9)9) TO #PB-1.STRING /* Displayable format
The following edit masks may be used for the various format/length definitions of numeric operands:
Format/Length | Edit Mask |
---|---|
I1 | -ZZ9 |
I2 | -Z(5)9 |
I4 | -Z(9)9 |
Nn.m/Pn.m | -Z(n).9(m) |