G
Guest
Hi,
I have had a very good look on Google Groups, OpenNETCF forum and this
forum and have not been able to find a solution to the problem.
The problem is that we have a number of forms with buttons (picture boxes)
which have the mouse up and mouse down events. We have a large percentage of
the forms which have buttons in the same location on each form, the problem
is that when you tap one of the buttons a few times, some of these taps are
taken across to the following forms that appear, which in turns means the
underlying buttons are clicked and therefore we are navigated to the wrong
form.
I was wondering if there was a way to cancel any screen taps that I don't
want to occur, or if there is a sort of cache, stack or buffer of events that
is created when the screen is tapped which can be cleared when navigating to
the new form therefore the rest of the screen taps will not be actioned.
I hope there is some way of solving this problem. If any one wants any more
information regarding this problem I will be happy to provide any information
I can.
I look forward to any replies.
Paul Diston
I have had a very good look on Google Groups, OpenNETCF forum and this
forum and have not been able to find a solution to the problem.
The problem is that we have a number of forms with buttons (picture boxes)
which have the mouse up and mouse down events. We have a large percentage of
the forms which have buttons in the same location on each form, the problem
is that when you tap one of the buttons a few times, some of these taps are
taken across to the following forms that appear, which in turns means the
underlying buttons are clicked and therefore we are navigated to the wrong
form.
I was wondering if there was a way to cancel any screen taps that I don't
want to occur, or if there is a sort of cache, stack or buffer of events that
is created when the screen is tapped which can be cleared when navigating to
the new form therefore the rest of the screen taps will not be actioned.
I hope there is some way of solving this problem. If any one wants any more
information regarding this problem I will be happy to provide any information
I can.
I look forward to any replies.
Paul Diston