Ken,
That's what I ended up doing - works fine - better in many other ways to - just a shame the page itself doesn't have a UIEnable - are you listening Microsoft?
Ken M.
>Hi Ken,
>
>Unless I'm misunderstanding the problem, I think adding an invisible object and using it's UIEnable event should do the trick for you.
>
>>Hi,
>>
>>Anyone have a good idea for preventing a page Activate event from happening EXCEPT when actually activated by the user by clicking or tabbing to the page? What I need is an UIEnable event for a page - not sure why it's not there for pages - seems like a critical ommision to me.
>>
>>Problem is that the activate fires whenever a dialog (or other windows program) is brought up and then user returns to my form, and I don't want it to. I've considered some sort of flag property on the form or an invisible object placed on the page in which I just use its UIENable. Anyone have a better idea?
>>
>>Ken
Ken B. Matson
GCom2 Solutions