I am sure that I got a good answer to my previous question because I have previously had a great deal of help on other questions from the guys who posted there.
But I am obviously doing something wrong, because when I copy the example code what the object inspector shows me for the MyProp property is a single text input field. I was expecting to see something that looks like the Font property, with Pitch, font family, etc i.e I expect to see a tree structure but I don't see the Color, Height or Width properties of the MyProp property.
Any ideas? Again, I copied that code exactly.
Edit: I forgot to mention (in this question) that I am using TMS scripter pro, which allows users to design forms at run time and provides its own object inspector, but that is probably derived from standard Delphi stuff, I guess.
Anyway, it appears that I am too dumb to code Delphi as I simply can't get this to work.
Edit: TMS assure me that if the class with "sub-properties) is descended from TPresistent then it will appear in the object inspector with sub-properties, just like Font, Anchors, etc
When I use this code, the "Warning" property appears as a text field in the object inspector and has no sub-properties
unit IntegerEditBox;
// An edit box which only accepts integer values and warns if the value is not in a certain range
interface
uses
SysUtils, Classes, Controls, StdCtrls,
EditBox_BaseClass;
type
TWarning = Class(TPersistent)
private
FWarningBelowValue : Integer;
FWarningAboveValue : Integer;
FWarningEmailTo : String;
FWarningSmsTo : String;
published
property WarningBelowValue : Integer read FWarningBelowValue write FWarningBelowValue;
property WarningAboveValue : Integer read FWarningAboveValue write FWarningAboveValue;
property WarningEmailTo : String read FWarningEmailTo write FWarningEmailTo;
property WarningSmsTo : string read FWarningSmsTo write FWarningSmsTo;
end;
TIntegerEditBox = class(TEditBox_BaseClass)
private
FWarning : TWarning;
procedure WriteValue(const newValue : Integer);
protected
// The new property which w/e introduce in this class
FValue : Integer;
public { Public declarations }
Constructor Create(AOwner: TComponent); override; // This constructor uses defaults
property Text;
published { Published declarations -开发者_JAVA百科 available in the Object Inspector at design-time }
property Hint;
// Now our own properties, which we are adding in this class
property Value : Integer read FValue write WriteValue;
property Warning : TWarning read FWarning write FWarning ;
end; // of class TIntegerEditBox()
procedure Register;
implementation
uses
Dialogs;
procedure Register;
begin
RegisterComponents('Standard', [TIntegerEditBox]);
end;
Constructor TIntegerEditBox.Create(AOwner: TComponent);
begin
inherited; // Call the parent Create method
Hint := 'Only accepts a number|Only accepts a number'; // Tooltip | status bar text
Mandatory := True;
Value := 0;
Text := IntToStr(Value);
end;
procedure TIntegerEditBox.WriteValue(const newValue : Integer);
begin
Text := IntToStr(newValue);
end;
end.
The original version of the demo code neglected to create an instance of the property object.
constructor TMyControl.Create(AOwner: TComponent)
begin
inherited;
FMyProp := TCustomType.Create;
end;
Don't forget to free it in the destructor.
Remy's comment on that answer points out that the property needs to be assigned differently. The property's write
accessor shouldn't write directly to the field. Instead, it should have a setter method that works like this:
procedure TMyControl.SetMyProp(const Value: TCustomType);
begin
FMyProp.Assign(Value);
end;
That also highlights the requirement that the property class's Assign
method be implemented, or else you'll get strange error messages like "Cannot assign a TCustomType to a TCustomType." A simple implementation could go like this:
procedure TCustomType.Assign(Source: TPersistent);
begin
if Source is TCustomType then begin
Color := TCustomType(Source).Color;
Height := TCustomType(Source).Height;
Width := TCustomType(Source).Width;
end else
inherited;
end;
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