Skip to main content

How to Act when ENTER is Pressed with SAPIEN PowerShell Studio

I’m deep into writing a new version of the stock monitor that I use to manage my investments.  I like things to work quickly so when I enter a stock symbol in a textbox and press ENTER, I want things to start happening.  Here is how you make things happen with the KeyPress event.  Remember, I like to instruct with very simple examples. 


First off, create a simple form and place a textbox in it.  I left the default name of textbox1.

Right click the textbox and select Add Events.


Scroll down and select KeyPress. You need to do it this way so the event registers.  If you manual type the event to create it, it will not work.


Now click Create.
This is what you get.


The first thing we are going to do is to suppress the “Ding” noise that you will get if you press ENTER.  We reference the event with $_.  Check out the members available to this event.


We will set the Handled event to $true to prevent the “Ding”.


Now we will act to the KeyChar property.  According to a standard ASCII chart, the carriage return is 13. We will use this with an IF statement to act on it.


We are only changing the color of the text boxes background to Green.  This is where you would take your action. Here is the before and after.


Again, this is a very simple example that I hope will allow you to do very complex actions.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Adding a Comment to a GPO with PowerShell

As I'm writing this article, I'm also writing a customization for a PowerShell course I'm teaching next week in Phoenix.  This customization deals with Group Policy and PowerShell.  For those of you who attend my classes may already know this, but I sit their and try to ask the questions to myself that others may ask as I present the material.  I finished up my customization a few hours ago and then I realized that I did not add in how to put a comment on a GPO.  This is a feature that many Group Policy Administrators may not be aware of. This past summer I attended a presentation at TechEd on Group Policy.  One organization in the crowd had over 5,000 Group Policies.  In an environment like that, the comment section can be priceless.  I always like to write in the comment section why I created the policy so I know its purpose next week after I've completed 50 other tasks and can't remember what I did 5 minutes ago. In the Group Policy module for PowerShell V3, th

Return duplicate values from a collection with PowerShell

If you have a collection of objects and you want to remove any duplicate items, it is fairly simple. # Create a collection with duplicate values $Set1 = 1 , 1 , 2 , 2 , 3 , 4 , 5 , 6 , 7 , 1 , 2   # Remove the duplicate values. $Set1 | Select-Object -Unique 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 What if you want only the duplicate values and nothing else? # Create a collection with duplicate values $Set1 = 1 , 1 , 2 , 2 , 3 , 4 , 5 , 6 , 7 , 1 , 2   #Create a second collection with duplicate values removed. $Set2 = $Set1 | Select-Object -Unique   # Return only the duplicate values. ( Compare-Object -ReferenceObject $Set2 -DifferenceObject $Set1 ) . InputObject | Select-Object – Unique 1 2 This works with objects as well as numbers.  The first command creates a collection with 2 duplicates of both 1 and 2.   The second command creates another collection with the duplicates filtered out.  The Compare-Object cmdlet will first find items that are diffe

How to list all the AD LDS instances on a server

AD LDS allows you to provide directory services to applications that are free of the confines of Active Directory.  To list all the AD LDS instances on a server, follow this procedure: Log into the server in question Open a command prompt. Type dsdbutil and press Enter Type List Instances and press Enter . You will receive a list of the instance name, both the LDAP and SSL port numbers, the location of the database, and its status.