>>>>
>>>>I think i will forget about all that stuff and use a normal checkbox
>>>>out of sight in the container and let it hold the controlsource.
>>>>
>>>>:-)
>>>
>>>Another alternative would be to have a property on the form, like:
>>>
>>>lControlSourced
>>>
>>>Set that to .T. as your default, set to .F. where not the case.
>>>
>>>Then you have a simple way of determining the path your code can take to effectively process.
>>>
>>> Jay
>>
>>That can not help me...
>>
>>If you look at the question, i search a way to know if a value in the controlsource property was a field or a property/variable.
>>
>>No star for this one! :-)
>
>Aw, shucks!
>
>I understand that that's your issue. But, I offer that suggestion because sometimes it's easier to redefine the issue than to develop a solution with the issue as originally defined!
>
> Jay
That's why i decide to use a control out of sigth to hold the controlsource instead of trying to parse it.
:-)
Thank's anyway
PS. if you want a star, say "please" 3 times...<g> :-)
If we exchange an apple, we both get an apple.
But if we exchange an idea, we both get 2 ideas, cool...Gérald Santerre
Independant programmer - internet or intranet stuff - always looking for contracts big or small :)
http://www.siteintranet.qc.ca