Introduction - A Little Background
My first exposure to Paolo Messina's code for creating a resizable
dialog box involved a CPopertySheet
embedded in a dialog box which (of course) contained one or more (dynamically
added) property pages. The app itself was already well along in the development cycle, but it still wasn't difficult
at all to add the support from CResizable*.*
that I needed.
Due to the nature of the property sheet, I didn't need the CResizableSheet
code, but I did make use of the other
two components (CResizableDialog
and CResizablePage
).
The Task At Hand
Over the last couple of months, my boss has been developing an application with a splitter view containing a
CTreeView
, a couple of CListViews
, and a CFormView
containing a tab control with several tabs that each contain
a list control.
As you all know, when a view is resized to be smaller than the data/object it contains, the pane automatically
displays scroll bars so that you can scroll the desired portion into view. The formview pane had the nasty habit
of scrolling the entire pane when such an event occurs, and this has the side affect (in our case) of scrolling
the tab titles out of the visible pane.
To remedy this situation, I used the embedded property sheet technique that I had used in my other application,
and instead of using a tab control, I used individual CResizablePage
objects to represent the tabs.
When using a property sheet, you have the benefit of a self-induced border around the tab control. While this
is handy on a dialog box, it's a royal pain with a CWnd
on a formview, especially our formview. The fix
was to offset the page enough to where the list control on the tabs filled the entire pane, thus emulating the
pane scroll bars.
I guess the long and short of it is that the formview looks like a tabbed list view, and the tabs don't scroll
off the pane when the scroll bars (if any) are manipulated.
I've included a demo (the same one I gave my boss) of the technique I used.
I don't remember where I got the code for the embedded property sheet, but it sure has come in handy in a number
of instances.
Lastly, many tanks to Paolo for the CResizable*.*
classes. They've been the most useful set of classes I've
used in many, many years.
I've been paid as a programmer since 1982 with experience in Pascal, and C++ (both self-taught), and began writing Windows programs in 1991 using Visual C++ and MFC. In the 2nd half of 2007, I started writing C# Windows Forms and ASP.Net applications, and have since done WPF, Silverlight, WCF, web services, and Windows services.
My weakest point is that my moments of clarity are too brief to hold a meaningful conversation that requires more than 30 seconds to complete. Thankfully, grunts of agreement are all that is required to conduct most discussions without committing to any particular belief system.