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Back to article list Search Articles Add Comment Printer friendly Direct link ABC: Using filtered locators 1998-12-31 -- Dennis E. Evans Newsgroups: topspeed.products.c5pe
>All the replys where helpfull but not what I was looking for. What I would
>like to do is take a value entered by the user and scroll to the next record
>that contains the texted. Clarion has some pretty nice query fuctions and
>even the incremental search is nice but sometimes you don't know the exact
>spelling and doing a query on a large file takes forever. Access has this
>feature built-in and I would think Clarion(Topspeed) could do the same.
I had a similar request in an application a while back,
the user even mentioned Access. I really did not want to try
and explain the different ways a page loaded browse worked and how Access
works.
Not sure this is what you are looking for, I debated about
posting but it may give you a couple of ideas.
As with all problems in this business there is probably a half a dozen other
ways to solve it, but this one does work
and is fairly simple.
I did this originally in CW4b and all seems to be well
since I upgraded.
Performance is not what you would call blinding fast but is acceptable, it
has to be as fast as a sequential search.
This has been used on a file with just over 30,000 records not huge but fair
sized.
And finally the solution :
Open the embed editor and add local variable to be used
for the user input and a class instance of the
FilterLocatorClass to be used to set the filter stuff.
WorkStr string(20) ! or whatever you need
FindItLocator FilterLocatorClass
in the Window.Init method, after the browse is initialized,
initialize the locator:
FindItLocator.Init(,Fil:KeyFielName,1,BRWx)
FindItLocator.FloatRight = true
Note there is no control passed in the init method call. The browse does
not know about the locator but the locator knows about the browse.
The Float right property is what allows the filter expression to use
the instring condition.
In the Window.Kill method add this
FindItLocator.Destruct() ! nulls the FreeElement field, which
is an ANY type.
Add an entry control to the tab needed
In the control event handling 'Accepted'
add this :
if WorkStr = ''
FindItLocator.Set() ! clear the locator
FindItLocator.UpdateWindow() ! clear the filter condition
Brwx.UpdateBuffer() ! make sure the buffer is loaded
Brwx.ResetFromBuffer() ! reset from the buffer
else
FindItLocator.Shadow = clip(WorkStr) ! set the shadow
FindItLocator.UpdateWindow() ! add to filter
Brwx.ResetQueue(Reset:Queue) ! redisplay the browse
end ! if
Now what happens is when the user enters something like
'on' and presses the tab key. All fields with 'on' will be displayed.
Jones, Johnson, On Sale, etc...
They can then add to the condition or work with what
they have. When they are done all the user needs to
do is blank the workstr variable and the browse is
redisplayed and the current record will be highlighted.
Again not sure this is what you are looking for but may get you started.
Hope it helps.
Dennis
Today is November 23, 2024, 2:08 am This article has been viewed 35368 times. Google search has resulted in 29 hits on this article since January 25, 2004.
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