| Allegro CL version 10.0 Unrevised from 9.0 to 10.0. 9.0 version |
Arguments: standard-object
Returns or sets with setf the value of the tabstop property of the
argument. The value of this property can be true or nil
. When a dialog is selected, pressing the TAB key
can move focus from one control on the dialog to another. If the value
of this property is true, pressing TAB will eventually move focus to
this control. If the value is nil
, this
control will be skipped over by the TAB key. See tab-position which determines how
many times TAB must be pressed after the dialog first appears before
this control is reached (assuming tabstop is true).
If a multi-line-editable-text
control
has the focus and the user presses the TAB key, then, if the component
has the tabstop
property turned on, the effect is to move the focus to the next
component in the tab order. If tabstop is off (or if the component is
just a text-edit-pane window rather than a multi-line-editable-text
dialog-item), then a tab character is inserted into the text. In some
earlier releases, you could enter a TAB character when the tabstop property is on by
typing Shift-Tab. This is no longer true. A TAB cannot be conveniently
entered when tabstop is on.
Windows only allows you to tab to a radio-button
when it is on. The usual
approach is to set the tab order of your dialog so that
all of the radio-buttons that are in the same cluster
will be adjacent in the tab order, and then make sure
that the initial value of one of the radio-buttons in the
cluster is non-nil. Then the user will be able to tab
to the currently "on" radio-button in that cluster and then
use the keyboard's arrow keys to move to the other
radio-buttons in that cluster.
Copyright (c) 1998-2019, Franz Inc. Oakland, CA., USA. All rights reserved.
This page was not revised from the 9.0 page.
Created 2015.5.21.
| Allegro CL version 10.0 Unrevised from 9.0 to 10.0. 9.0 version |