EXTERNAL

Highlight, HighlightRow, HighlightRowLineWidth

These three properties, along with the SelectOnEntry property of the controls within a grid's cells, determine whether cell contents in a grid are highlighted when you move into the cell. The effects you can create with them are a little strange.

Usage

grdGrid.HighlightRow = lColoredBorder lColoredBorder = grdGrid.HighlightRow grdGrid.Highlight = lAllowHighlights lAllowHighlights = grdGrid.Highlight grcGrid.HighlightRowLineWidth = nHighlightRowWidth nHighlightRowLineWidth = grcGrid.HighlightRowLineWidth
There are two kinds of highlighting for each cell in a grid. First, there's a focus highlight that indicates which cell has focus—the border of the cell is colored. This highlight is controlled by HighlightRow, which was added in VFP 5. When you turn this one off, you don't actually get rid of the focus highlight—it just changes from colored and noticeable to a just barely visible thickening of the cell border. It appears that the non-highlight is always a pale gray, though, no matter what color your grid lines are. VFP 7 added a new capability to surround the whole record with a line. If HighlightRow is true, then the record has a box just inside the grid lines drawn to the width specified in the HighlightRowLineWidth property. This property can have a value from 0 to 7. Fair warning: Borders wider than 2 pixels can look pretty strange. They can be drawn over the first part of the first character in a left-justified first column, and can do the same to the right-justified character in the last column. This isn't the most aesthetic way of highlighting a row.

The second kind of highlight pertains to a grid cell. Normally when you tab into a grid cell, the text there is selected (highlighted). Two properties can change this. Highlight changes it for the whole grid. By default, it's True, setting highlighting on for all columns of the grid. We'd be inclined to turn highlighting off when a grid is read-only. The highlight confuses people in that case.

The other property that controls highlighting is the column's SelectOnEntry. Once you turn highlighting on for the grid, you can then control each column individually.

We should point out that, even with all the relevant settings turned on, you don't get the whole row highlighted the way you do in lists. Even with VFP 7's HighlightRowLineWidth property, you still get an interesting effect (when wide lines are used, say, greater than HighlightRowLineWidth = 2, well, let's just say they're not quite up to our aesthetic standards). Grids are not lists, and you would have to do some more tricks, including setting DynamicBackColor for every column. Christof Lange published a very complete solution to the problem in the Ask Advisor column in the November '98 issue of FoxPro Advisor.

When HighlightRow is .F., but Highlight is .T., the highlighting of individual cells looks pretty strange.

Example

ThisForm.grdReference.HighlightRow = .F.  && No focus highlight ThisForm.grdReference.Highlight = .F.  && No highlight of                   && contents, either   * This sets the highlight box to 2 pixels wide ThisForm.grdReference.HighlightRow = .T.  && Turn on highlight ThisForm.grdReference.HighlightRowLineWidth = 2

See Also

GridLines, SelectOnEntry


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Copyright © 2002 by Tamar E. Granor, Ted Roche, Doug Hennig, and Della Martin. All Rights Reserved.



Hacker's Guide to Visual FoxPro 7. 0
Hackers Guide to Visual FoxPro 7.0
ISBN: 1930919220
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2001
Pages: 899

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