Thanks.
 

  _____  

From: Katherine Moss [mailto:katherine.m...@gordon.edu] 
Sent: Wednesday, April 25, 2012 3:31 PM
To: gw-scripting@gwmicro.com
Subject: RE: WE And Microsoft Development Environments



You're thinking of the professional version, I think.  Pro or above has the
object model.  

 

From: Chip Orange [mailto:lists3...@comcast.net] 
Sent: Wednesday, April 25, 2012 2:21 PM
To: gw-scripting@gwmicro.com
Subject: RE: WE And Microsoft Development Environments

 

Hi Rick,

 

Well, the other approach is to see if you can get info from any object model
(I thought I had read that VS (premium, maybe not express) does have one,
and then there's the window native object model to investigate).

 

I suspect VS is using UIA, and that's why you're seeing garbled text, and
not much of it.  I understand it still has several bugs everyone is waiting
on MS to fix.

 

I would stay with VS 2008 for now if none of the alternatives above works
out.

 

Chip

 

 

 

 


  _____  


From: RicksPlace [mailto:ofbgm...@mi.rr.com] 
Sent: Wednesday, April 25, 2012 8:16 AM
To: gw-scripting@gwmicro.com
Subject: Re: WE And Microsoft Development Environments

Hi Chip et al:

In Visual Studio 2010 the Forms Designer uses something called Adorners.

These appear to be WPF based and I can't get anything out of them using the
WE Immediate Window Analysis tool.

I would create a project, open the Forms Designer and drop some controls on
it like a TextBox and buttons.

I can not get to them using the cursor at all and can get to them with the
Mouse but often the text is garbled when reading with the mouse.

I was going to script the window but haven't been able to use the GW WE
Immediate Window Tool to get at the buttons, text boxes etc... within the
window.

I have tried using the Print Mouse.xxxxx in many combinations with no luck.

I even tried using WeEvent but it does not tell me anything about the
button, textbox etc... controls either.

Have you guys run up aginst these window types and how did you get at their
children?

Note that I get the Adorn window info but it says it has no children so that
doesn't seem to work either.

I remember getting the clips but there were 11 clips, they were jumbled up
and researching I found that this type of control may be using glyphs, not
sure.

Does this type of control exist in other MS software like Word etc...

Any ideas I might try to get at these controls?

Rick USA

 

----- Original Message ----- 

From: Chip  <mailto:lists3...@comcast.net> Orange 

To: gw-scripting@gwmicro.com 

Sent: Sunday, April 22, 2012 5:14 PM

Subject: RE: WE And Microsoft Development Environments

 

Hi Rick and Kate,

 

Don't forget the best place for scripting tutorials and articles is the GW
wiki at:

 

http://gwmicro.com/wiki

 

Just create an account there, take 15 mins to read the article on basic
formatting of wiki text, and then create your new article page.

 

The great thing about putting stuff here, aside from there's already this
great collection and we'd like to keep everything in one spot if possible,
is that anyone can add more to any article to flesh it out, make
corrections, link it to associated resources they have found, etc.

 

Also, there's an associated wiki page behind the scenes for each article
where we can discuss ideas and suggestions for how the article might be
modified or otherwise improved.

 

Chip

 

 


  _____  


From: Katherine Moss [mailto:katherine.m...@gordon.edu] 
Sent: Saturday, April 14, 2012 6:06 PM
To: gw-scripting@gwmicro.com
Subject: RE: WE And Microsoft Development Environments

You can have a place on my site.  After all, my site is a technology site as
well.  

 

From: RicksPlace [mailto:ofbgm...@mi.rr.com] 
Sent: Saturday, April 14, 2012 3:44 PM
To: gw-scripting@gwmicro.com
Subject: Re: WE And Microsoft Development Environments

 

Hi Kate: 

Well, have a hot key working and the MSAA stuff working and next up will be
a simple Window Hook to display the Properties related to a Window or Window
Control.

Then I will write up the step by step and...

I will make them available to wherever, doesnt matter.

What would be good is an index of links with pages of tutorials online but I
dont want to spend the time to build that.

I will see if there is a way to have tutorials linked to from App "Central
but 

I will likely give them to Chip to add to his current Scripting tutorial
series as I did with the Globalization Tutorial.

I have not done much with Windoweyes nor scripting in some time now so am
not familiar with where things are located but can usually find them if I
need them.

Later Kate and have a good weekend.

 Rick USA

----- Original Message ----- 

From: Katherine Moss <mailto:katherine.m...@gordon.edu>  

To: gw-scripting@gwmicro.com 

Sent: Saturday, April 14, 2012 1:11 PM

Subject: RE: WE And Microsoft Development Environments

 

You should post them to app central where we all can see them!  That would
be nice for those of us .NET junkies over here LOL.  Because I'm sure that
I'm not the only one who is.  

 

From: RicksPlace [mailto:ofbgm...@mi.rr.com] 
Sent: Saturday, April 14, 2012 5:01 AM
To: gw-scripting@gwmicro.com
Subject: Re: WE And Microsoft Development Environments

 

Hi Aaron.

Thanks again and I will continue experimenting with it today.

My old Script (App) defined (Registered) a Hot Key that worked and I think
accessed a Window Object's Properties and Events.

If these work that will demo:

Use of MSAA;

Use of a Window Object;

Use of a Hot Key.

That should make for a pretty decent intro demo and tutorial to post up
someplace.

I will likely continue with a second Demo and Tutorial with a few more
features after this one.

So far so good.

Rick USA

----- Original Message ----- 

From: Aaron  <mailto:aa...@gwmicro.com> Smith 

To: gw-scripting@gwmicro.com 

Sent: Friday, April 13, 2012 8:35 PM

Subject: Re: WE And Microsoft Development Environments

 

On 4/13/2012 5:19 PM, RicksPlace wrote: 

It still needs some testing and the Form1 grabs focus sometimes even though
hidden.


You can keep the form from displaying by creating a Main() routine, and
putting your startup logic there:

Sub Main()
   ' Instantiate your form
   Dim myForm as Form1 = New Form1()
 
   ' Put initialization stuff here instead of in Form_OnLoad
 
   ' Continue on without displaying the form
   Application.Run()
End Sub

If you then ever need to show the form, you can do myForm.Show()

You can do this in C#, too, by changing code in the Main() function in
Program.cs from:

    Application.Run(new Form1());

to

    Form myForm = new Form1();
    Application.Run();

Aaron

-- 
Aaron Smith 
Web Development * App Development * Product Support Specialist
GW Micro, Inc. * 725 Airport North Office Park, Fort Wayne, IN 46825
260-489-3671 * gwmicro.com
 
To insure that you receive proper support, please include all past
correspondence (where applicable), and any relevant information
pertinent to your situation when submitting a problem report to the GW
Micro Technical Support Team.

Reply via email to