Hi Jared,

    That is the usual explanation and nothing gets done. There are some 
great examples in some of the Object Model tree view, but as you point out, 
a person jumps around and around. So, excusing it only prevents one concise 
simple reference manual.
    As I said a reference manual should show more of what an engineer has 
written with a proven example; like the W3 Schools attempts to do, also 
using web live examples when possible. I am not saying live examples, but an 
example can make things a lot easier; immediate mode does this feature when 
you run the example.

    Python also does this and it is an open source, free stuff and in almost 
all cases you have the huge manual to go through.

    When Aaron asked I had mentioned to just give an example in the location 
where it says it is a so and so object. I even have to look in some other 
text to even find the Treeview and Listview event names, it is not in the 
Help Menu App Doc; searching for something you must no how it is spelled 
first and guessing maybe you get lucky.

    I assumed the Key object is a stand alone like the keyboard object is, 
according to the logic of the tree view list and when creating an object it 
said none was created...

    Inside the Keyboard object it uses the Keys, plural form, and search 
around for another place where key was mentioned and decided to quit looking 
at that point because there was only the main list one which I already 
attempted to use.

    But, as I said, as long as people say it is not for the novice, yet 
people keep on asking, and keep getting these responses, nothing gets done.

    I am not knocking Chip for he is going through one example at a time and 
there is documentation of what he is doing, all I am asking for is the final 
project, "All In One Location!"

        Sincerely
        Bruce


Sent: Friday, August 12, 2011 11:45 PM
Subject: Re: Tree view


On 8/12/2011 2:11 PM, BT wrote:
"Granted experienced programmers don't need it, but first time users do."
API references aren't really for first time programmers though, at least
not without something else to guide their exploration. That's where the
Wiki, Chips' audio classes, etc. prove their worth.

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