>Note: F10 has a standard meaning in the Windows interface. It means 'activate the first pad of the system menu'. Try hitting F10 in Word or Excel (or the VFP development environment) and you'll see this happen.
>
*SNIP*
>
>If your users specifically request this behavior, you should (IMHO) try to talk them out of it because it violates the standard Windows interface. If they absolutely insist on it, give them what they want, but it's their problem that they chose a non-standard interface.
>
>My US$.02,
>Rich.
I agree with Rich. My users were used to pressing F10 to save (DataFlex) but when I found out that I couldn't access that in the keypress event, I switched them to F12 without much trouble.
Peter
Peter Robinson ** Rodes Design ** Virginia