Hello Tom,
I think that sometimes it is difficult to know
how comprehensive to make a single answer .
The nice thing about a forum like this is that it
enables multiple answers from different people
and allows the person raising the original
question to ask supplementary questions and add
to their knowledge at their own pace.
Many thanks,
Mike.
At 19:44 03/01/2013, you wrote:
That will indeed work. But sometimes it's wise
to first see how much information you're dealing
with, because it may be a lot. The FilterByType
method will do just that and the Count property,
well, I think that's probably pretty
self-explanatory as well. But regardless, here's
a peek at my Thunderbird window.
print Mouse.Window.Clips.FilterByType(ctText).Count
217
Wow. That's a lot of clips.
Hth,
Tom
On 1/3/2013 1:14 PM, M F Mason wrote:
Hello Steve,
I think that the following will achieve this:
print Mouse.Window.Clips.ClipsText
Cheers,
Mike.
At 14:35 03/01/2013, you wrote:
Hi,
Yep, it was.
All the best
Steve
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*From:* M F Mason [mailto:[email protected]]
*Sent:* 29 December 2012 10:53
*To:* [email protected]
*Subject:* RE: Beginner question on Immediate Mode
Hello Steve,
I thought that in your experiment you were wanting to use the Immed app
to obtain the text in the mouse window.
Was this in fact the case?
Many thanks,
Mike.
At 13:33 28/12/2012, you wrote:
Hi Mike,
I think Tomâs explanation does it for me and may help you as well.
Thanks for your help.
All the best
Steve
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77 Exeter Close
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*From:* M F Mason
[<mailto:[email protected]>mailto:[email protected]]
*Sent:* 28 December 2012 13:03
*To:* [email protected]
*Subject:* Re: Beginner question on Immediate Mode
Hello Steve,
My understanding is that
whilst Window is indeed a property of Mouse object,
Mouse.Window will return an object which, in turn, has properties.
I do not think that
print Mouse.Window
will print out the text of the mouse window.
The Window object does have a clips method which returns a clips
object object which has a clipstext property which holds all the clips
text for the Window.
I may be missing something but I hope this helps a little.
All the best,,
Mike.
At 12:05 28/12/2012, you wrote:
Hi guys and gals?
I read with interest that in Immediate Mode, you can for example,
print out the mouse window as a variable. I checked the reference
guide and Mouse is an object, and Window is a property.
So I opened a program, interested in what I would get, Outlook 2007 as
my example and loaded my inbox.
I then hit the Control-Shift-Q window to bring up Immediate Mode, and
typed:-
Print mouse.window
I get the error:-
Error object does not support this property or method.
So where am I going wrong?
This is not important to any project, it is just experimentation and I
want to understand whatâs happening here. I would have thought the
mouse object would hold the window property and give me some result,
whether it is numeric or a string, but looks like the window property
isnât supported.
Interestingly, this example is also referenced in the Immediate Mode help.
Any thoughts please?
Thanks.
All the best
Steve
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