>>
>> I want my program to use the colors that I made at development
>> time. What setting do I use?
>
>I use something like this in FPD:
>
> Set Color of Scheme 1 To W/N, N/W, W/N, W/N, W+/N, N/W,
> N/W, N+/N,
>GR+/B, R+/B, +
> Set Color of Scheme 2 To BG/b, W+/B, N/W*, B/W, R/BG*,
>B/W*, R+/GR*, W/N*, B/W, bg/b, +
> Set Color of Scheme 3 To W/GR, N/W, BG/N, BG/N, BG/N, N/BG,
> W+/W,
>N+/N, BG/N, BG/N, +
> Set Color of Scheme 4 To W/N*, W+/N*, G+/N*, B/W, R/BG*, GR+/R,
> W+/N,
>N+/N, B/W, W/N,+
> Set Color of Scheme 5 To W+/gr, W+/BG, W+/gr, W+/RB, W/RB, N/W*,
>W+/N, N+/N, W+/BG, W/RB, +
>
>....etc.
>
>The values were created in window/color dialog, and pasted from what you
>get by Scheme() function. Now, in VFP you'd use RGBScheme().
>
>Now, the bad news. You don't have a color picker in Fox anymore, you use
>Windows color picker. You don't know which colors apply to what anymore,
>except by trial and blow.
>
>I knew that in any of 24 color scheme 10th color pair applied to a
>disabled object, that color schemes 2 and 3 made cursor invisible (they
>were for menus & popups) etc. Anyway, Windows philosophy says you don't
>color your book, you sell a coloring book, so user applies colors at
>will.
>
>As the result, all the applications look the same. Gray. Worse, M$ gray.
>If you really want your own colors (I do that, too - I hate gray), you
>probably should hard-code them somewhere in your next-to-base classes,
>and tell your form classes to use those colors as a color source.
>
>And... er... color schemes 13 to 15 are read-only, for no
>well-documented reason.
Hi Dragan... thanks for the code.. it helps... I have my colors set to
whatever the user is using on his computer. If the user changes his color
scheme, my program will reflect the change.... thanks again..rob