t want to check to see that there isn't other _smarter_ ways to do
that in Win.
Ah, in that case, no. What you're doing is rather out of the
ordinary... so that's why it's tough to do it. The set of declares
I posted earlier should help you out though -- assuming that Windows
doesn't consider *your* floater to be the frontmost window (in which
case you'll always get your application's ProcessInformation back
from the call).
That will of course be the result :-) I'll let you know.
By the way... The menubar in my global floating window doesn't
react to the mouse until I move or resizes the window. Looks like
either a bug in RB or a newbie-mistake. Do you have any clue?
What version of RB are you using? I just tested on 5.5.5fc2 and the
menubar works for me without having to do anything.
I'm using 5.5.4
Are you setting the menubar dynamically, or just using
Window.MenuBar to set it at design-time?
It is set at the design-time.
I'll create an empty app to see if it is me who is messing thing up.
Dan
_______________________________________________
Unsubscribe or switch delivery mode:
<http://www.realsoftware.com/support/listmanager/>
Search the archives of this list here:
<http://support.realsoftware.com/listarchives/lists.html>
|