Enables or disables an item.
Usage
Set_Property(OLECtrlEntID, "OLE.ItemEnabled[group; item]", Boolean)
Values
[True | False]
Default: True
Indices
Index | Description |
---|---|
group | Index to an existing group |
item | Index to an existing item within the group |
Remarks
The ItemEnabled property enables or disables an item. A disabled item will still fire the OnClick event when the user clicks on it because the OnClick event always fires. However, disabled items will not respond to the mouse as it hovers over it. and its text is grayed. In other words, it gives all appearances of being disabled. Then the OnClick event fires, you should examine the ItemEnabled property before deciding whether or not to handle it.
Dynamic Index
Every indexed property, including this one, supports dynamic indexing. There are three ways to index a ShortcutBar property: single, ranged, and all. Single indexing operates on one element at a time while ranged and all indexing operates on several elements at once, reducing the amount of code required.
Single
Single indexing is simple. Just pass a single integer to index an existing element.
Ranged
Ranged indexing operates on one or more properties. Instead of passing a single integer, you pass two integers delimited by a dash '-' character. For instance, to operate on elements 3, 4, 5 and 6 you pass '3-6'.
All
All indexing operates on all existing elements at once. Instead of passing a numerical index, you pass the word "All".
Setting multiple properties
Use ranged or all indexing to set the same value for multiple properties at once. This is particularly useful for boolean properties, such as enabling/disabling settings for several properties at once. It can also be useful for initializing or resetting a control.
Getting multiple properties
Getting multiple properties is tricky because it is possible to be getting multiple properties with different values. The ShortcutBar control resolves this by using a same/indeterminate paradigm. If all values of multiple properties are the same, then that value is returned. If there is at least one different value, then an indeterminate value is returned. In most cases the returned value is "", except for boolean properties. They return a value of 2, which is the value of OI Check Boxes in their indeterminate states.
Example
// Disable an item Set_Property(@Window:".OLE_SHORTCUT", "OLE.ItemEnabled[1; 1]", 0) // Enable all items in all groups Set_Property(@Window:".OLE_SHORTCUT", "OLE.ItemEnabled[All; All]", 1)