Bonnie,
That's exactly what I was trying to do. I wanted to reference the parent container of the button, whether it was on the form or on a tab page. I hadn't thought about a panel being a separate container. I'll have to take that into account. Thanks for your help.
Linda
>Linda, you'll also need to add some code in there for container controls, such as Panels and UserControls ... IOW, if you have TextBoxes, CheckBoxes and/or ComboBoxes in a container control on your form, then you'll also have to go through the Controls collection of that Panel or UserControl, or whatever the container control is.
>
>~~Bonnie
>
>
>
>>UPDATE: I got this one with some help from a friend. I had to modify the code in the button click to reference the parent object as
>>((mmButton)sender).Parent. Now all is well.
>>
>>I want to have all the controls on a form disabled at start up. When the user hits the EDIT button, I want to enable all the TextBoxes, CheckBoxes and ComboBoxes. I created a small test form to try to figure this out but I'm not having any luck so far. I can't seem to hit the correct parent property. Any suggestions? Thanks.
>>Here's what I have.
>>
>> private void btnEdit_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
>> {
>> this.Ready4EditMode(this.ParentForm, "Edit");
>> }
>>
>> private void Ready4EditMode(Control currParent, string editMode)
>> {
>> foreach (Control ctl in currParent.Controls)
>> {
>> if (ctl is OakLeaf.MM.Main.Windows.Forms.mmTextBox ||
>> ctl is OakLeaf.MM.Main.Windows.Forms.mmCheckBox ||
>> ctl is OakLeaf.MM.Main.Windows.Forms.mmComboBox)
>> {
>> if (editMode == "Edit")
>> ctl.Enabled = true;
>> else
>> ctl.Enabled = false;
>> }
>> }
>> }
>>
Linda Harmes
HiBit Technologies, Inc.