I got a very clever solution from Christof Lange.
Basicaly he does the following:
fill the Comment property of one object with a unique string, check if the other object's Comment is the same. If it is, it is the same object.
Marco.
>>Why can't i check if an object reference equalizes an object refrence:
>>
>>oObject = This WORKS
>>? oObject = This Operator/oparend type mismatch
>>
>>How should i check if to object refrence refer to the same object (its names are not unique).
>>
>>Marco Beuk.
>Marco,
>I think you already have the answer. I just want to summarize and make it clear.
>oObject=this works because it's an *assignment*
>? oObject = This fails because it's a *comparison test* and you cannot use "=" as comparison operator for objects (in VFP 6 you can as heard - not tested or see).
>Compobj() is the key function to compare objects but not enough alone because it simply checks if two objects PEM are identical or not.
>A container can have more than one object with *same name*. This is open to discussion as what we call a container (a _screen or application is a container ? - for me yes they should be).
>So if we agree a container can hold more than one object with same name, Ken Levy's simple approach is good for identifying instances of same object :
function mycompobj
>lparameters o1, o2
>local lcName, llSameObject
>llSameObject = compobj(o1,o2)
>if llSameObject
> lcName = o1.name
> o1.name = "x"+o1.name
> llSameObject = compobj(o1,o2)
> o1.name = lcName
>endif
>return llSameObject
Cetin