WindowType
This property determines whether a
form or formset is modal or modeless. It also determines whether
it's a real Visual FoxPro form or a backward-compatibility READ
form.
Usage
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oObject.WindowType = nWindowType
nWindowType = oObject.WindowType
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There are four choices for WindowType, but you'll only
want to use two of them in forms you create in Visual FoxPro.
Types 2 and 3 are for forms converted from FoxPro 2.x—2 is
modeless READ-type, and 3 is modal READ-type. In fact, you can't
even choose these two in the Property Sheet. Because no one
(okay, no one except the people who wrote the code in the first
place) knows how they work, we urge you to forget you ever read
about them.When you create forms and formsets with
CreateObject(), you can set WindowType before you Show the thing.
Or you can just pass the appropriate parameter to the Show
method.You can't change WindowType while the form is displayed,
but you can change it while it's hidden. However, we can't
imagine why you'd want to change an existing form from modal to
modeless or vice versa. That's bound to confuse the heck out of
your users.Most forms are either modal or modeless all the time.
Either it's a dialog or a document. You can set WindowType in the
Form Designer and be done with it.We have occasionally run into a
form that's usually a document, but once in a while needs to be
called modally from another form. That's where the opportunity to
change WindowType (or pass the parameter to Show) at runtime
comes in handy.
Example
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oForm = CreateObject("Form")
oForm.WindowType = 1 && Make form modal
oForm.Show()
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