>Hi,
>
>You should be able to refer to your 'outer' class by name. e.g to access a property of SQLDBWrapper from within an instance of ClassDataSet: SQLDBWRAPPER.someProperty etc..
>
>HTH,
>Viv
I thought the same thing, but maybe it's because of the nesting of how each clase is instantiated, that I cannot reference the main class like that. It just wont accept it. When I type "SQLDBWrapper." what lists underneath it (through intellisence) is *only* the 2 sub-classes. No methods or properties show from the "main" class.
________________________
Ben Santiago, MCP & A+
Programmer Analyst (SQL, FoxPro, VB, VB.Net, Java, HTML, ASP, JSP, VBS)
Eastern Suffolk BOCES - Student Data Services
Programming today is a race between software engineers striving to build bigger and better idiot-proof programs, and the Universe trying to produce bigger and better idiots. So far, the Universe is winning.
-Rich Cook