I am trying to update a chart from within a module in vb.net;
Me.Chart1.Series.Add("Profile")
Me.Chart1.Series("Profile").Color = Color.LightGray
......
But I keep getting an error message: 'ME' not valid within a module.
Any workaround would be much appreciated please. Kind regards.
Me means the current Object or Instance of a Class. Me works from within a Form because a Form is a Class AND the Chart is presumably contained by the Form so it is then found and acted upon. The Chart is NOT contained by the Module so Me makes no sense here. Additionally, a Module is a special kind of class where everything (including the Module) is SHARED, which is why you also can't use Me within it.
The solution is to PASS the Chart into the Module, either storing a reference to it in a Module member, or simply using it via a Parameter in a Method:
' ... in the Module ...
Public Sub UpdateChart(ByVal c As Chart)
c.Series.Add("Profile")
c.Series("Profile").Color = Color.LightGray
' ... other code that use "c" ...
End Sub
In the Form, you'd call it with:
UpdateChart(Me.Chart1)
Related
I'm new to VB and I'm currently migrating a vb6 app I did not write to .net and I'm struggling with this error,
If TypeOf Application.OpenForms.Item(i) Is frmAddChangeDelete Then
'UPGRADE_ISSUE: Control ctrlAddChangeDelete1 could not be resolved because it was within the generic namespace Form. Click for more: 'ms-help://MS.VSCC.v90/dv_commoner/local/redirect.htm?keyword="084D22AD-ECB1-400F-B4C7-418ECEC5E36E"'
If **Application.OpenForms.Item(i).ctrlAddChangeDelete1.ParentFormNumber = intFormNumber** Then
If Application.OpenForms.Item(i).Text = "Add Proofed Expense Items" Then
boolAddProofed = True
Exit For
ctrlAddChangeDelete1 is supposedly calling the friend class ctrlAddChangeDelete from a separate VB file, so I'm not sure why it's saying that
"'ctrlAddChangeDelete1' is not a member of 'System.Windows.Forms.Form'."
Any help is appreciated, thank you !
Application.OpenForms is a collection not strongly typed.
When you reference elements there you get back a generic Form.
In a generic Form there is no control named ctrlAddChangeDelete1
If you have a form derived class named frmAddChangeDelete and this class has a control named ctrlAddChangeDelete1 then you need to cast the reference stored in the OpenForms collection to your specific form class before trying to reference that control.
Moreover, to access that control from external code, you should also have the Modifiers property set to Public instead of the default Internal. Otherwise you will not be able to access the control from any code external to the class.
To retrieve correctly your form you can write
Dim delForm = Application.OpenForms.
OfType(Of frmAddChangeDelete)
FirstOrDefault()
If delForm Is Nothing Then
' No form of type frmAddChangeDelete is present in the collection
' write here your message and exit ?
Else
' Now you can use delForm without searching again in the collection
......
The code above uses the IEnumerable.OfType extension and this requires the Imports System.Linq.
If you don't want to use this then you can always use the TryCast operator to get the reference to the correct class
' Still you need a for loop up ^^^^ before these lines
Dim delForm = TryCast(Application.OpenForms(i), frmAddChangeDelete)
if delForm Is Nothing then
....
else
....
I have a VB.net program that I got from someone else. It is comprised of a main form and 6 other modules (all .vb files). These files all have a "VB" icon next to them in the Explorer pane. I am trying to make a call to a sub-routine in one of the modules from the main form. My line of code is:
QuoteMgr.StartGettingQuotesLevel2(sSym)
where QuoteMgr is the name of the module and StartGettingQuotesLevel2(sSym) is the name of the sub-routine. When I enter this, I get the error message:
Reference to a non-shared member requires an object reference.
The sub-routine is defined in the QuoteMgr Module as follows:
Public Sub StartGettingQuotesLevel2(ByVal oSymbol As String)
What is strange is when I enter:
QuoteMgr.
(the name of the module with a period), it does not show me all the sub-routines and functions in the module. It only shows:
Update_Level1
Update_Level12
Update_Level2
These are Public Const in the module.
Can you tell me what I need to do?
What the compiler is trying to tell you with this error message
Reference to a non-shared member requires an object reference
is that the StartGettingQuotesLevel2 subroutine is an instance method not a shared or class method, see a more detailed explanation here
To call an instance method, you need to have an object instance to call it on. In your case, an object instance of the class type QuoteMgr. Like in the example below:
' create a new QuoteMgr object instance
Dim myQuoteMgr As QuoteMgr = New QuoteMgr()
' call its instance method with "abc" as its oSymbol argument.
myQuoteMgr.StartGettingQuotesLevel2("abc")
It is possible that you only want a single QuoteMgr object instance to be created and used by your main form. In that case, you can make it a member variable of your main form and create it once.
Public Partial Class MainForm
' Create it as a private member variable of the main form
Private m_QuoteMgr As QuoteMgr = New QuoteMgr()
' Use it when "some" button is pressed
Private Sub btnSome_Click(sender As Object, e As EventArgs) Handles btnSome.Click
m_QuoteMgr.StartGettingQuotesLevel2(txtSymbol.Text)
' And possibly do something with the results.
End Sub
End Class
Also, if instances of your QuoteMgr class depend on other object instances for their tasks, you will have to supply these to the constructor method of the QuoteMgr class as the arguments for its constructor's method parameters. Constructors (Sub New(...)) look like this:
Public Class QuoteMgr
' This is a constructor that takes two arguments
' - oMainSymbol: a string value
' - oKernel: an instance of the type Kernel
Public Sub New(oMainSymbol As String, ByRef oKernel As Kernel)
' ....
End Sub
End Class
That means, that when you create a QuoteMgr instance, you have to call its constructor method with the things it need, for example
' There must be an instance of Kernel created somewhere.
Dim myKernel As Kernel = ....
' create a new QuoteMgr object instance with these arguments:
' - oMainSymbol = "SYMABC"
' - oKernel = myKernel
Dim myQuoteMgr As QuoteMgr = New QuoteMgr("SYMABC", myKernel)
Some other recommendations
The explanations I have provided, are about basic VB.NET language features (e.g. the terms highlighted in bold). I suggest that before you make any changes to the code you have, you (1) make a backup of it, and (2) try to read a tutorial and practice on something smaller.
The compiler is (virtually) always right. When it gives you an error message, read it carefully, it will indicate the line where something is wrong and a message that tells you what it needs or is missing.
It is not the purpose of Stack Overflow to provide tutorials or code. It is a Q&A site where the best questions and answers deal with specific, delineated programming problems, for which succinct answers are possible.
Right click your application and go to Properties.
Make sure your application type is "Windows Forms Application".
It means that the routine you are trying to call needs to reference an instance of the form to access the routine. You can either reference an instance as Alex says, or you can make the routine 'Shared', so it doesn't need an instance. To do this, change the definition in QuoteMgr.vb to
Friend Shared Sub StartGettingQuotesLevel2(ByVal oSymbol As String)
Switching it to `Shared' may start showing compiler errors, if the routine accesses form controls or module-level variables. These will need to be added to the parameter list.
I am updating some code from a vb6 application to VB.NET.
I have a problem that occurs when I try to open a form from the main form.
It calls this function:
Public Sub optDrawSafeFile_CheckedChanged(ByVal eventSender As System.Object, ByVal eventArgs As System.EventArgs) Handles optDrawSafeFile.CheckedChanged
If eventSender.Checked Then
'--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
' JRL 11-03-06
' change the enables
UpdateGUI((False))
cboProject.SelectedIndex = frmMain.cboProjects.SelectedIndex
SelectJob()
End If
End Sub
And when it goes to execute this line:
cboProject.SelectedIndex = frmMain.cboProjects.SelectedIndex
It blows up and says this:
frmMain is declared like this:
How can I fix this error?
TL;DR
It is described in more detail in this video.
Short answer: change frmMain to My.Forms.frmMain.
cboProject.SelectedIndex = My.Forms.frmMain.cboProjects.SelectedIndex
Long answer:
In VB6, referencing a form by its name allowed you to access it both as a class and an instance of that class. The instance that you access in this manner is called the default instance. This is not possible in VB.NET. However, VB.NET includes a dynamically generated class, My.Forms, that provides functionality similar to that of default instances.
See http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms379610%28v=vs.80%29.aspx#vbmy_topic3 for more information about My.Forms and the "My" namespace.
A better and more object-oriented way to handle this, however, would be to pass the instance of the main form to the constructor of the frmAddMethod form and store it in an instance field.
So, within the class definition in frmAddMethod.vb:
Sub New(ByVal mainForm As frmMain)
_mainForm = mainForm
End Sub
Private _mainForm as frmMain
And when you create the frmAddMethod instance from frmMain, pass in "Me" to the constructor:
Dim addMethodForm as new frmAddMethod(Me)
"Me" is the instance of the class from which a non-shared class method was called.
This will allow you to use the _mainForm class field to access the instance of the main form from non-shared methods of frmAddMethod.
*Edited to recommend My.Forms instead of DefInstance per Plutonix's comment.
Nothing is "blowing up", your program is not crashing. Using a type name, like frmMain, where an object reference is expected is something that the VB.NET compiler allows. Specifically for the Form class, an appcompat hack for VB6 code. It is the debugger that doesn't think much of it. It merely gives you a diagnostic on your watch expression since it doesn't have the same appcompat hack as the compiler does. So doesn't know what to display.
You can use My.Forms instead to get the active form object reference. So make your watch expression:
My.Forms.frmMain.cboProjects.SelectedIndex
Only do this when you are single-stepping the code, it will still go wrong if you use Debug + Break All to break into the program. Setting a watch expression on Me.cboProject is otherwise the obvious workaround in this specific case.
Is it possible to call a public sub located in a UserForm from a Class Module? I want to put a callback in the Form Module but I can't seem to get it to expose.
Is this a fundamental limitation of UserForms in VBA?
It is exposed inside the UserForm Code Module, I can see it in the intelisense for the Me object, but I can't seem to access it from outside the Form Module.
The real answer to my question is to have a better understanding of UserForms and since I could not find a good reference for that I thought I would answer my own question to share my learnings.
Thanks to #Dick Kusleika for the key insight!
First of all, this is not a UserForm:
It is no more a Form than a Class Module is a variable.
UserForm1 is a Class Module with a GUI and with the following default, inherited properties
These properties are like a standard Interface that is common to all Form Class Modules and therefore instances. The Name property is in parentheses because it is not the name of the object, it is the name of the the Type that is used to declare variables to instantiate the particular Form Class.
More properties and methods can be added by the user at design time and this is done in exactly the same way as a Class Module.
For example, in a Form Module...
Option Explicit
Dim mName As String
Property Let instName(n As String)
mName = n
End Property
Property Get instName() As String
If Len(mName) = 0 Then mName = Me.Name
instName = mName
End Property
In this example, the Form Class Name is used as the default Instance Name.
When you add Controls to the form, its like graphically adding
Public WithEvents controlName As MSForms.ControlType
...in a Class Module.
The Methods inherited in the standard interface include one called Show.
You can create an instance of a form using UserForm1.Show and this is very confusing and misleading. To me it implies that you are showing the Object called UserForm1 but you are not. I don't know why you would want to use this method because, apart from being confusing, it does not deliver any direct reference to the object created. Its a bit like Dim v as New Type only worse, because there is no referencing variable.
You can instantiate a Form Class in exactly the same way you can a Custom Class object and then use the show method to deploy it...
Dim f As UserForm1
Set f = New UserForm1
f.Show
For me, this is the preferred method.
You can add custom properties and controls to the UserForm1 Class and you can give it a meaningful name when creating it, but you can also reference it using the standard UserForm interface.
For example
'In a Class Module
Dim mForm as UserForm1
Property let Form(f as MSForms.UserForm)
Set mForm = f
End Property
For me, after understanding the above, all of my confusion about UserForms and my frustration at not being able to find a decent reference disappears. I just treat them as Class Modules and its fine.
The only difference between a Userform and Class Module is that a Userform has a UI element that a Class Module doesn't. So a Userform is just a special type of Class Module. That means that Public Subs inside a Userform behave just as they do in any other class - as a method of the class.
To access a Public Sub inside a class module (such as a userform), you need to instantiate the class, then call the method.
Dim uf1 As UserForm1
Set uf1 = New UserForm1
Uf1.MyPublicSub
I am trying to call a public subroutine from a Windows form based on a string variable containing the name of the subroutine. The subroutine is a procedure in a code module and works fine when called by using the procedure name directly.
The VB.net function CallByName should work, but I don't know how to specify the module name as the "Object Ref" parameter.
In the code shown, "ReportLibrary" is a module containing the public sub with the name contained in the string strReportProcedure. This results in the following error helper:
The Help says this about the ObjectRef parameter:
ObjectRef
Type: System.Object
Required. Object. A pointer to the object exposing the property or method.
What am I missing or is it just not possible to call a routine from a module using CallByName?
CallByName will not work for code in VB.Net modules since the first parameter requires an object. You need to move the methods into a class, then create an instance of the class in order to make CallByName work.
Hmmm, I think the problem is somewhere else.
I think you haven't declared a variable like this:
Dim RL as NEW Reportlibrary
And after declaring it, use this:
CallByName(RL, strReportProcedure , CallType.Method , blnPreview)
Probably the problem was in declaration, because (in your case) your class doesn't let you access to your library's subroutines. That's why you need to declare "as New ReportLibrary".
Good Luck !
Dim object As NEW Reportlibrary and then just use that Object.