AlwaysOnTop, AutoCenter
These form properties
control whether the form stays on top of other displayed forms
and whether the form is automatically centered when it opens.
Usage
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frmForm.AlwaysOnTop = lIsAlwaysOnTop
lIsAlwaysOnTop = frmForm.AlwaysOnTop
frmForm.AutoCenter = lStartsCentered
lStartsCentered = frmForm.AutoCenter
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Forms with AlwaysOnTop set to .T. can't go beneath forms
where that property is set to .F., even if the second one is the
active form. If you have multiple AlwaysOnTop windows, though,
they can go over each other. (To see how an AlwaysOnTop form
behaves, right-click on the Property Sheet and make sure Always
on Top is checked, or, in VFP 3, push the pushpin on the Property
Sheet.) An AlwaysOnTop form doesn't prevent other forms from
getting focus; it just makes it hard to use the other forms. Use
the form's WindowType property or Show method parameters to make
the form modal and prevent others from getting focus.Forms with
AutoCenter set to .T. appear centered when they first start up.
Setting AutoCenter to .T. when a form is running centers it on
the spot, but setting AutoCenter to .F. doesn't change the form's
position. AutoCenter doesn't keep the user from moving the form,
either—use Movable for that.AlwaysOnTop is ignored at
design-time, but in VFP 3, AutoCenter is not. Since it's a pain
to design a form that's centered, if you're working in VFP 3
you'll probably want to set AutoCenter in the form's Init method
rather than in the PropSheet.
Example
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* Form Init might contain:
This.AlwaysOnTop = .T.
This.AutoCenter = .T.
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Copyright © 2002-2018 by Tamar E. Granor,
Ted Roche, Doug Hennig, and Della Martin. Click for license
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