Oh okay.  What about Powershell calls?  

-----Original Message-----
From: Tom Kingston [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Sunday, November 27, 2011 1:08 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: how to know what to reclass controls as when encountered

Because Window-Eyes supports the VBScript and JScript engines directly. 
So it cuts down on the overhead considerably and makes scripting much easier.

Regards,
Tom


On 11/27/2011 11:30 AM, Katherine Moss wrote:
> Oh dang.  Nice!  Now VBScript I do understand a little bit just as I do with 
> C#.  And that's another question that's been burning inside of me for a long 
> time.  How come we never see apps written in C#?
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Jared Wright [mailto:[email protected]]
> Sent: Sunday, November 27, 2011 11:27 AM
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: Re: how to know what to reclass controls as when encountered
>
> Think of Immed as an interactive interpreter for WE apps written in VBScript 
> or JScript.
> On 11/26/2011 8:59 PM, Katherine Moss wrote:
>> Is that a mode you can open?  I don't use WE much right now because it's 
>> kind of pointless having to restart my computer every half an hour.    I 
>> hope to purchase it within the week though.
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: Tom Kingston [mailto:[email protected]]
>> Sent: Saturday, November 26, 2011 7:51 PM
>> To: [email protected]
>> Subject: Re: how to know what to reclass controls as when encountered
>>
>> Just to add to what Chip said, sometimes, if you're lucky, a simple look at 
>> the control in the immediate mode window will do the trick. I just opened a 
>> program wherein I knew I had some good examples. And here's all I did.
>> 1. Focus the custom control.
>> 2. Open the Immediate mode window.
>> 3. Enter the following and note the result.
>> Print FocusedWindow.ClassName
>> sfppack2Bld1503TrackbarClass
>>    From that I know it's just a custom track bar and reclass it as a track 
>> bar.
>> But this is the luck of the draw. Sometimes class names are informative or 
>> at least give you a potential clue or hint as to what to try.
>>
>> Otherwise it's a matter of trying to figure the control out by evaluating 
>> its functionality. And sometimes these custom controls look virtually no 
>> different than their standard counterparts. So borrowing a pair of 
>> knowledgeable eyes can sometimes reveal their secret.
>>
>> Good luck,
>> Tom
>>
>>
>>
>> On 11/26/2011 7:34 PM, Chip Orange wrote:
>>> Hi Katherine,
>>>
>>> I'm afraid you can't reclass unless you have a pretty good idea as 
>>> to what it should be.
>>>
>>> If you're a scripter, you can use the various scripting tools to 
>>> take a look at the control's name or class (which often gives you a 
>>> hint as to what it's being used for), or the MSAA info log using the 
>>> WE Event app might tell you something.
>>>
>>> If you're not a scripter, then you are usually left to trial and 
>>> error (and a lot of the time, you have to set it back to "original"
>>> because whatever you chose is worse than what it was doing).
>>>
>>> Sorry it's not easier than that, but if it is, I'm afraid I don't 
>>> know about it.
>>>
>>> Chip
>>>
>>>
>>>      _____
>>>
>>> From: Katherine Moss [mailto:[email protected]]
>>> Sent: Saturday, November 26, 2011 7:19 PM
>>> To: [email protected]
>>> Subject: how to know what to reclass controls as when encountered
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Hello all,
>>>
>>>                    I was fooling around a few weeks ago with the WCF 
>>> service configuration editor (a tool in the Windows SDK that I will 
>>> need in future development endeavors), and I realized that some of 
>>> the controls were custom according to WE, so I made an attempt at 
>>> reclassing them.  I reclassed them as buttons not knowing what they 
>>> were actually supposed to be, and whatever I did, that seemed to 
>>> make them all disjunct and unreadable.  WE could read them, but it 
>>> sounded like Gibberish rather than English.  What is the first step when 
>>> trying to reclass a control in figuring out what it should be?
>>> Thanks guys.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Katherine Moss,
>>>
>>> Administrator of the AccessCop Network, previously Raeder24.org.
>>> Visit us on the web at http://raeder24.org<http://raeder24.org/>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
>
>


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