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MDI Overview

This document introduces you to the concept of Multiple Document Interface (MDI) and how to
create menus within an MDI application. You will learn to create an MDI application in
Microsoft Visual Studio .NET and learn why you might want to use this type of interface. You
will learn about child forms that are contained within the MDI application, and learn to create
shortcut, or context-sensitive, menus.

MDI is a popular interface because it allows you to have multiple documents (or forms) open in
one application. Examples of MDI applications include Microsoft Word, Microsoft Excel,
Microsoft PowerPoint®, and even the Visual Studio integrated development environment itself.
Each application consists of one (or more) parent windows, each containing an MDI client area
—the area where the child forms (or documents) will be displayed. Code you write displays as
many instances of each of the child forms that you want displayed, and each child form can only
be displayed within the confines of the parent window—this means you can't drag the child
forms outside the MDI container. Figure 1 shows a basic MDI application in use.

Figure 1. Use MDI to open multiple windows and have them all contained within the
parent area

Single Document Interface

Don't be misled: MDI is only one of several possible paradigms for creating a user interface. You
can also create applications that display just a single form. They're easier to create, in fact. Those
applications are called Single Document Interface (SDI) applications. Microsoft Windows®
Notepad is an SDI application, and you can only open a single document at a time. (If you want
multiple documents open, you simply run Notepad multiple times.) You are under no obligation
to create your applications using the MDI paradigm. Even if you have multiple forms in your
project, you can simply have each one as a stand-alone form, not contained by any parent form.
Uses of MDI

You'll use MDI most often in applications where the user might like to have multiple forms or
documents open concurrently. Word processing applications (like Microsoft Word), spreadsheet
applications (like Microsoft Excel), and project manager applications (like Microsoft Project) are
all good candidates for MDI applications. MDI is also handy when you have a large application,
and you want to provide a simple mechanism for closing all the child forms when the user exits
the application.

Creating an MDI Parent Form

To create an MDI parent form, you can simply take one of your existing forms and set its
IsMDIContainer property to True. This form will now be able to contain other forms as child
forms. You may have one or many container forms within your application.

Tip Note the difference here between Visual Studio .NET and Microsoft Visual Basic® 6.0
behavior. In Visual Basic 6.0, you could only have a single MDI parent form per application, and
you had to use the Project menu to add that one special form. In Visual Studio .NET, you can
turn any form into an MDI parent form by simply modifying a property, and you can have as
many MDI parent forms as you require within the same project.

You may have as many different child forms (the forms that remain contained within the parent
form) as you want in your project. A child form is nothing more than a regular form for which
you dynamically set the MdiParent property to refer to the MDI container form.

Note The user interface objects you've designed within the Visual Studio environment are
really templates for forms. That is, they don't actually become real Form objects until you
instantiate them at run time. Therefore, your project can contain as many different templates for
MDI child forms as you like. You can instantiate and then show as many instances of as many
different templates as you need, while your applications are running.

Run-time Features of MDI Child Forms

At run time, the MDI parent form and the MDI child forms take on special features:

• All child forms are displayed within the MDI parent's client area. The client area is the
area below the MDI parent's title bar, any menus, and any tool bars.
• Child forms can be moved and sized only within the MDI parent's client area.
• Child forms can be minimized and their icon will be displayed within the parent's client
area.
• Child forms can be maximized within the parent's client area and the caption of the child
form is appended to the caption of the MDI form.
• Windows automatically gives child forms that have their FormBorderStyle property set
to a sizable border a default size. This size is based on the size of the MDI parent's client
area. You can override this by setting the FormBorderStyle property of the child form to
any of the fixed type of borders.
• Child forms cannot be displayed modally.
• The MDI form can be minimized and only one icon will be displayed on the desktop
representing the MDI form and all of its children.
• If the MDI form is unloaded, all of the loaded children will also be unloaded.

Note The client area includes any usable area on the MDI form minus any toolbars or status
bars that you may have added to the MDI form.

Create an MDI Project

In this section, you will walk through the steps of creating a simple MDI application using
Visual Studio .NET. To do this, you will create a new form that will be the MDI parent form.
You will add some menus to this new form, and then you will load the product form from a
menu as a child form.

Create the MDI Parent Form

To create the MDI parent form

1. Open Visual Studio .NET


2. Create a new Windows application project.
3. Set the name of the project to MDI.sln.
4. Rename the form that is created automatically to frmMain.vb.
5. With the frmMain selected, set the form's IsMdiContainer property to True.
6. Set the WindowState property to Maximized.

That's all there is to it: you've created an MDI parent form.

Creating Menus

Your main form will require menus so that you can perform actions such as opening child forms,
copying and pasting data, and arranging windows. Visual Studio .NET includes a new menu
designer that makes creating and modifying menus a snap.

To add menus to your MDI parent form

1. Double-click the MainMenu tool in the Toolbox window to add a new object named
MainMenu1 to the form tray.

Note Unlike the form designer in Visual Basic 6.0, the Visual Studio .NET form
designer places controls that don't have a user interface at run time into a special area on
the form designer: the form "tray". They're out of the way, and don't get buried
underneath other controls. This is a real improvement!

2. At the top of the MDI parent form, click the box with Type Here in it and type &File.
Tip Just as in Visual Basic 6.0, inserting an ampersand (&) into a menu caption displays
the caption with an underscore under the following letter. Pressing Alt+<the letter> acts
as a hotkey, activating the menu item. One thing to note: if you're using Windows 2000
or later, it's possible that the hotkeys won't show up underlined until you press the Alt
key. This setting is buried in the Display applet within Control Panel. In the Display
Properties dialog box, check the Effects page: the Hide keyboard navigation
indicators until I use the Alt key option controls this behavior.

3. Press Enter to move to the next menu item and type &Products.
4. Press Enter to move to the next menu item and type a hyphen (-).

Tip Rather than using the "-" to indicate a divider in the menu, you can insert the next
menu item (Exit, in this case), and then right-click the new item. Select "Insert Separator"
from the context menu, and Visual Studio .NET will insert a separator above the current
item for you.

5. Press Enter and type E&xit.

You have now created the first drop-down menu on your main form. You should have something
that looks like Figure 2.

Figure 2. The menu designer allows you to type your menu structure in a WYSIWYG
fashion

To the right of the File menu and at the same level, you'll see another small box with the text,
Type Here. Click it and type the following menu items by pressing Enter after each one.

• &Edit
• Cu&t
• &Copy
• &Paste

Once more to the right of the Edit menu and at the same level, add the following menu items in
the same manner.

• &Window
• &Cascade
• Tile &Horizontal
• Tile &Vertical
• &Arrange Icons

Creating Names for Each Menu

After creating all the menu items, you'll need to set the Name property for each. (Because you'll
refer to the name of each menu item from any code you write concerning that menu item, it's
important to choose a name you can understand from within your code.) Instead of clicking each
menu item one at a time and then moving over to the Properties window to set the Name
property, Visual Studio provides a shortcut: Right-click an item in the menu, then select Edit
Names from the context menu. Now you can simply click each menu item and set the name
property directly on each menu. This is certainly quicker than using the Properties window to
accomplish the same task.

Use the following names for your menu items:

• mnuFile
• mnuFProducts
• mnuFExit
• mnuEdit
• mnuECut
• mnuECopy
• mnuEPaste
• mnuWindow
• mnuWCasade
• mnuWHorizontal
• mnuWVertical
• mnuWArrange

Test out your application: Press F5 and you should see your main MDI window appear with your
menu system in place.

Display a Child Form

To add the code that displays the child form, frmProducts, make sure the main form is open in
Design view, and on the File menu, double-click Products. Visual Studio .NET will create the
stub of the menu item's Click event handler for you. Modify the procedure so that it looks like
the following:

Private Sub mnuFProducts_Click( _


ByVal sender As System.Object, _
ByVal e As System.EventArgs) Handles mnuFProducts.Click
Dim frm As New frmProducts()

frm.MdiParent = Me
frm.Show()
End Sub

This code declares a variable, frm, which refers to a new instance of the frmProducts form in the
sample project. Then, you set the MdiParent property of the new form, indicating that its parent
should be the current form (using the Me keyword). Finally, the code calls the Show method of
the child form, making it appear on the screen.

Some interesting things to note:

• Me is a built-in keyword in Visual Basic .NET—just as in Visual Basic 6.0, this keyword
refers to the class whose code is currently running. In this case, that's the MDI parent
form, whose menu item you just clicked.
• You don't have to set the MdiParent property of the new child form. If you don't, the
form will simply load as a new normal form, outside the MDI parent. As a matter of fact,
you can set the MDI parent to be a different MDI container if you like.
• If you don't call the Show method, the child form won't ever display.

Differentiating Between Child Windows

You'll note that each instance of the Products form looks identical. You'll most likely need some
way to differentiate the windows. One alternative is to modify the caption of the window as you
load each instance. In the sample, you can create a static variable to contain a counter, increment
that variable each time you open a form, and then assign that value into the Text property of the
form.

To uniquely identify each child form

1. Modify the mnuFProducts_Click procedure so that it looks like this:


2. Private Sub mnuFProducts_Click( _
3. ByVal sender As System.Object, _
4. ByVal e As System.EventArgs) _
5. Handles mnuFProducts.Click
6. Dim frm As frmProducts
7. Static intCount As Integer
8.
9. frm = New frmProducts()
10.
11. ' Increment the caption counter.
12. intCount += 1
13.
14. ' Set the caption to be unique.
15. frm.Text = frm.Text & " " & intCount.ToString()
16.
17. frm.MdiParent = Me
18. frm.Show()
19. End Sub
20. Run the project, create a few Products forms, and note that the caption of each form
includes a different number.

Note What's that Static keyword? Using Static, rather than Dim, to declare a variable
inside a procedure creates a variable that maintains its value from one invocation of the
procedure to the next. When you declare a variable using Dim, that variable gets
reinitialized each time the procedure is called. When you use Static, the variable
maintains its value. That's what you want, in this case—you want intCount to maintain its
value, so that it continues to increment each time you create a new instance of
frmProducts.

Child Menus in MDI Applications

What if a child form has its own set of menus? How do those menus interact with the menus of
the parent form? In previous versions of Visual Basic you really didn't have much control over
the behavior—the menus of the currently active child simply replaced the menus of its parent. In
Visual Studio .NET, however, you can control how the menus interact, using the MergeOrder
and MergeType properties of the individual menu items.

The MergeOrder property controls the relative position of the menu item when its menu
structure gets merged with the parent form's menus. The default value for this property is 0,
indicating that this menu item will be added at the end of the existing menu items. The
MergeType property controls how the menu item behaves when it has the same merge order as
another menu item being merged. Table 1 shows a list of the possible values you can assign to
the MergeType property.

Table 1. The MergeType property allows you to specify what happens when menu items
merge

Value Description
Add The MenuItem is added to the collection of existing MenuItem objects in a
merged menu. (Default)
MergeItems All submenu items of this MenuItem are merged with those of existing
MenuItem objects at the same position in a merged menu.
Remove The MenuItem is not included in a merged menu.
Replace The MenuItem replaces an existing MenuItem at the same position in a
merged menu.

By default, a menu item's MergeOrder property is set to 0. The MergeType property is set to
Add by default. This means that if you create a child form with a menu on it, the menu will be
added at the end of the main menu. Consider Figure 3, which shows a child form called from the
parent form's main menu. This form has a Maintenance menu on it (and the parent form does
not). All of the items on the parent's main menu have their MergeOrder properties set to 0 and
this menu's MergeOrder property is set to 0, so this menu will be added at the end of the main
menu on the MDI parent form.

Figure 3. A child form that has menus will by default be added to the end of the main menu

To create the form in Figure 3

1. On the Project menu, click Add Windows Form.


2. Set the new form's name to frmChildWithMenus.vb.
3. Add a MainMenu control to this form.
4. Set the Name property for the MainMenu control to mnuMainMaint.
5. Add the following menus as shown in Table 2.

Table 2. Windows Form menus

Menu Name
&Maintenance mnuMaint
&Suppliers mnuMSuppliers
&Categories mnuMCategories

If you were to call this form exactly like you did the Products form in the previous section you
will see that your main form looks like Figure 4. You can see that by default, the menu is added
to the end of this form.
Figure 4. Menus are added to the end of the main menu by default

Call this form by adding a new menu item under the File menu:

1. Open frmMain.vb in Design view.


2. Click on the separator after the Products menu item and press the Insert key to add a
new menu item.
3. Type Child form with Menus as the text of this new menu item.
4. Set the Name property of this new menu item to mnuFChild.
5. Double click this new menu item and modify its Click event handler so that it looks like
this:
6. Private Sub mnuFChildMenus_Click( _
7. ByVal sender As System.Object, _
8. ByVal e As System.EventArgs) _
9. Handles mnuFChildMenus.Click
10. Dim frm As New frmChildWithMenus()
11. frm.MdiParent = Me
12. frm.Show()
13. End Sub

Note If you wish to merge the Maintenance menu in between the Edit and
Window menus, you could set the MergeOrder property on the Edit menu item
to 1, and the MergeOrder property on the Window menu to a 2. Then on the
Maintenance menu item on frmChildWithMenus, set the MergeOrder property
to 1 and leave the MergeType with its default value, Add. Taking these steps will
add the Maintenance menu after the menu on the main form with the same
MergeOrder number as it has (that is, after the Edit menu, but before the
Window menu).

Working with MDI Child Forms


If you have multiple child forms open, you may want to have them arrange themselves, much as
you can do in Word or Excel, choosing options under the Window menu. Table 3 lists the
available options when arranging child windows.

Table 3. Choose one of these values when arranging child windows

Menu Item Enumerated Value


Tile Horizontal MdlLayout.TileHorizontal
Tile Vertical MdiLayout.TileVertical
Cascade MdiLayout.Cascade
Arrange Icons MdiLayout.ArrangeIcons

Add some menus to your main form for each of these options:

1. Open frmMain.vb in Design view.


2. On the Window menu, double-click Cascade.
3. For the Cascade menu item, modify the Click event handler so that it looks like the
following:
4. Private Sub mnuWCascade_Click( _
5. ByVal sender As System.Object, _
6. ByVal e As System.EventArgs) _
7. Handles mnuWCascade.Click
8. Me.LayoutMdi(MdiLayout.Cascade)
9. End Sub

On the Window menu, double-click each menu item and add the appropriate code.

Tip The LayoutMDI method replaces the Arrange method you may have used
in Visual Basic 6.0.

What If There's No Active Child Form?

If there's no active child form, attempting to work with the ActiveMdiChild property of the
parent form will trigger a run-time error. To avoid this situation, you can check the value of the
property in the Click event handler for the Window menu item, and enable or disable the Center
Child Form menu item accordingly. To add this feature, follow these steps:

1. With frmMain open in Design view, press F7 to edit the form's code module.
2. Select mnuWindow from the Class Name combo box (the list on the top left of the editor
window), and then select Select from the Method Name combo box (the list on the right).
3. Modify the Select event handler, so that it looks like this:
4. Private Sub mnuWindow_Popup( _
5. ByVal sender As Object, _
6. ByVal e As System.EventArgs) _
7. Handles mnuWindow.Popup
8. mnuWCenterChild.Enabled = _
9. Not (Me.ActiveMdiChild Is Nothing)
10. End Sub
11. 4.Run the project, and verify that if you have child windows displayed, the Center Child
Form menu item is enabled. If there isn't a child form open, verify that the menu item is
disabled.

How does this work? Here are some things to consider:

• The Popup event occurs when you select a menu item that includes sub-items. (You can't
use the Click event, since that event doesn't occur for menu items that contain sub-items.)
• The Is operator allows you to compare values to the built-in value Nothing. In this case,
the ActiveMdiChild property returns this special value if it doesn't refer to a form, and
you must use the Is operator to check for this. (The = operator checks values for equality:
the Is operator checks references to objects for equality.)
• The syntax of the procedure may be confusing. The value in parentheses (Me,
ActiveChild, Is, Nothing) returns a Boolean value: it's either True or False. The Not
operator toggles the returned value to be the opposite Boolean value. The whole line of
code assigns the return value from the expression in parentheses to the Enabled property
of the menu item. In this case, if it's not true that the ActiveChild is Nothing, you'll
enable the menu item. If it's True, you'll disable the menu item.

Tracking Child Windows

Visual Basic .NET will keep track of all child forms that you create, and it's easy to create a
window list menu to manage the child windows. If you wish to see a list of all of the child forms
and be able to give a specific child form focus, follow these steps:

1. Load frmMain in Design view.


2. Select frmMain's Window menu.
3. In the Properties window, set the MdiList to True.
4. Run the project, open a couple of Products forms, and then click the Window drop-down
menu. You should see each instance of the Product form that you opened displayed in the
window list.

Creating Shortcut Menus

In most modern Windows applications, you can click the right mouse button and see a context-
sensitive, or shortcut (pop-up), menu. These menus give you the ability to perform actions based
on the current context—that is, changing depending on the current situation.

Visual Studio provides the ContextMenu control, making it just as easy to create context menus
as it was to create main menus. Once you've dropped one of these controls on your form (it will
appear in the tray area, just like the MainMenu control did), you can edit the menu items to be
displayed by this context menu.
Note The design of your context menu won't display on the form until you've clicked the
ContextMenu control. This makes it possible for one form to contain both MainMenu and
ContextMenu controls.
Tip You can place as many ContextMenu controls as you need on your forms.

To add a context menu to the Products form:

1. Open frmProducts in Design view.


2. In the Toolbox, find the ContextMenu control.
3. Double-click this control to add it to the tray area of the form.
4. Click the ContextMenu control to give it focus.
5. Change the Name property to cmnuProdID.
6. Add the menu items (shown in Table 4) to this control, and set the Name properties as
shown. When you add to a context menu, you start with the first menu item under the
top-level menu. Figure 5 shows the finished context menu.

Table 4. Context menu items

Menu Name
&Lookup mnuPLookUp
&Copy mnuPCopy
&Paste mnuPPaste

Figure 5. When adding items to the ContextMenu control, create a top-level item
that won't ever be displayed as the parent for your items

7. Click the Product ID text box.


8. In the Properties window, set the ContextMenu property to the ContextMenu control
you just created, cmnuProdID.
9. Run the project. On the File menu, click Products to create a child form, and righ-click
on the Product ID text box to see the context menu appear.
If you were completing this form, you could now add code to respond to the Click events on
each of these menus.

Manipulating Menus at Run Time

You may need to modify the behavior of menu items while your application is running. In this
section, you'll see how to check and uncheck, and add and remove menu items
programmatically.

To set up for the following sections, you will need to add three new menu items under the File
menu on your MDI form.

1. Open frmMain.vb in Design view.


2. Click the File menu to display its sub-items.
3. Add three menu items, as described in Table 5.

Table 5. File menu items

Menu Name
&Add Menus mnuFAddMenus
&Remove Menus mnuFRemoveMenus
&Add &New Menu mnuFAddNew

Checking and Unchecking Menu Items

Visually selecting a menu item programmatically is easy: simply set the menu item's Checked
property to True or False, as necessary. For example, you might want to indicate that you've
added new menu items by adding a check to the Add Menus item, and remove it once you've
removed the items. You'll add and remove the menu items in the next section, but for now, add
and remove the check by following these steps:

1. On the File menu, double-click Add Menus to view the Click event procedure.
2. Modify the event procedure, so that it looks like this:
3. Private Sub mnuFAddMenus_Click( _
4. ByVal sender As System.Object, _
5. ByVal e As System.EventArgs) _
6. Handles mnuFAddMenus.Click
7. If Not mnuFAddMenus.Checked Then
8. mnuFAddMenus.Checked = True
9. End If
10. End Sub
11. To repeat the previous two steps, on the File menu, double-click Remove Menus and
modify its Click event procedure so that it looks like this:
12. Private Sub mnuFRemoveMenus_Click( _
13. ByVal sender As System.Object, _
14. ByVal e As System.EventArgs) _
15. Handles mnuFRemoveMenus.Click
16. If mnuFAddMenus.Checked Then
17. mnuFAddMenus.Checked = False
18. End If
19. End Sub
20. Run the project, and on the File menu, double-click Add Menus. Verify that you see a
check next to the item. To repeat, on the File menu, click Remove Menus to verify that
the check has been removed.

Adding and Removing Menus

Windows Forms allows you to add and remove menus programmatically at run time. Using the
Add and Remove (or RemoveAt) methods of the MenuItems collection, you can create new
menus at run time, and delete any menu items.

Note In Visual Basic 6.0, you could only delete menu items that you created dynamically, at
run time. That is, you couldn't delete static menu items. In Visual Studio .NET, you can delete
any menu item.

Adding Menus Programmatically

To add a menu item, call the Add method of a particular menu item. For example, you might
want to add two new menu items on the File menu. To do this, follow these steps:

1. On the on the File menu, double-click Add Menus to view its Click event handler.
2. Modify the event procedure so that it looks like this:
3. Private Sub mnuFAddMenus_Click( _
4. ByVal sender As System.Object, _
5. ByVal e As System.EventArgs) _
6. Handles mnuFAddMenus.Click
7. If Not mnuFAddMenus.Checked Then
8. mnuFAddMenus.Checked = True
9. ' Adds these menus to the end of the File menu
10. With mnuFile.MenuItems
11. .Add("New Menu 1")
12. .Add("New Menu 2")
13. End With
14. End If
15. End Sub

Each menu item contained within the MainMenu (or ContextMenu) control is itself a
MenuItem object, and just as with any other object, you refer to the menu items using the Name
property you assigned to each. If a menu item contains other menu items (as each top-level menu
item does), you can use its MenuItems property to refer to the collection of menu items it
contains. In this case, you called the Add method of a MenuItem object (mnuFile) to add menu
items to the collection of items. (In this example, mnuFile was the name you assigned to the File
menu item.)

Removing Menus Programmatically

To remove menu items programmatically, you can either call the MenuItem collection's Remove
or RemoveAt method. Remove requires you to provide a MenuItem object; if you instead want
to remove items by their position within the menu, call the RemoveAt method.

In this example, the simplest way to remove the menu items you created in the previous steps is
to specify their position within the menu. You'll call the RemoveAt method to do the work.
Because menu items are numbered starting at 0 (as are all collections and arrays in Visual
Basic .NET), you need to take that into account when removing menu items.

To handle removing the two menu items you've just added, modify the Click event procedure for
the Remove Menus items on the File menu, so that the procedure looks like this:

Private Sub mnuFRemoveMenus_Click( _


ByVal sender As System.Object, _
ByVal e As System.EventArgs) _
Handles mnuFRemoveMenus.Click
If mnuFAddMenus.Checked Then
With mnuFile.MenuItems
' Remove the last two items
.RemoveAt(.Count - 1)
.RemoveAt(.Count - 1)
End With
mnuFAddMenus.Checked = False
End If
End Sub

Run the project to verify that choosing the Add and Remove Menus menu items correctly adds
and removes the two extra items.

Using Menu Groups

When you add a check to a menu item, you're indicating the state of that menu item—it's either
selected, or it's not. Normal checked menus work individually, and are independent of other
menu items.

You may have a need to treat a group of menu items as a dependent set. In this case, selecting
one item from the group forces all the other items in the group to be deselected. Although Visual
Studio .NET doesn't provide a way to make this happen for you, it does supply the RadioCheck
property of menu items that at least provides a visual indication. Rather than seeing a normal
check, menu items with their RadioCheck property set to True display a dot when they're
selected. It's still up to your code to deselect all the other items in your menu group, once the
user selects a menu item.

To demonstrate this behavior, modify properties and add code so that the four window
management menu items (Cascade, Tile Horizontal, Tile Vertical, Arrange Icons) work as a
group. To do that, follow these steps:

1. With frmMain open in Design view, select the Window>Center Child Form menu item.
2. Right-click, and on the shortcut menu, click Insert Separator, which inserts a separator
item above the selected item.
3. Click on the Window>Cascade menu item, then at the same time, press Ctrl and click
the other four window management items on the menu, selecting all four.
4. In the Properties window, set the RadioCheck property for the four selected menu items
to True.
5. Add the following procedure to the frmMain class:
6. Private Sub RadioCheck_Click( _
7. ByVal sender As System.Object, _
8. ByVal e As System.EventArgs) _
9. Handles mnuWArrange.Click, mnuWCascade.Click, _
10. mnuWHorizontal.Click, mnuWVertical.Click
11. mnuWArrange.Checked = False
12. mnuWCascade.Checked = False
13. mnuWHorizontal.Checked = False
14. mnuWVertical.Checked = False
15. CType(sender, MenuItem).Checked = True
16. End Sub
17. Run the project, create some Product forms, and use the Window menu items to arrange
the children. As you use the Cascade, Tile Horizontal, and other menu items, you
should see a circle next to the most recently selected item. Figure 6 shows the results of
adding this new feature.
Figure 6. Setting a menu item's RadioCheck property to True shows a dot, rather
than a check, next to selected items

How Did the Code Work?

It may seem odd that you managed to add new functionality to four menu items without
modifying their event procedures at all. This example took advantage of a new feature in Visual
Basic .NET—you can hook up as many event handlers to a specific event as you need, using the
Handles clause on a procedure. Here, you provided a new procedure (RadioCheck_Click) that
handles Click events for each of the four menu items you want to have work together.

Here are the important issues:

• The procedure you want to call must match the procedure signature of the standard Click
event for menu items. That is, it must receive two parameters (one as System.Object, the
other as System.EventArgs) and return nothing at all. (It must be a Sub, in other words.)
• You must add a Handles clause for each event you want to handle. In this case, you're
handling the Click event of four different menu items.
• Within the procedure, you can use the first parameter (named sender, in this example) to
figure out which object triggered the event. This example first sets each of the four items
to be unchecked, and then checks the item that triggered the event.

It's also interesting to note how the RadioCheck_Click procedure set the RadioCheck property
of the object it received as its first parameter. To convert the Object variable into a MenuItem
type, the code calls the CType function, indicating the variable to convert, and the result type
(MenuItem):

CType(sender, MenuItem).Checked = True

You'll use CType a lot in Visual Basic .NET. This important function allows you to convert
variables from one type to another. Because Visual Basic .NET is so strictly typed (it's always
careful about the specific data types you're working with, unlike Visual Basic 6.0), you'll often
need to use this function to convert variables into a specific data type.

Note It's important to note that when you use the Handles clause as you did here to add event
handlers, you cannot control the order in which those events get handled. Visual Basic .NET
does supply a different mechanism, the AddHandler statement, which gives you more control.
Using the Handles clause is simpler, however, and if you don't care about the order in which the
procedures handle the event (in this case, you don't), it's an easier way to add extra functionality.

Summary

In this document you have learned to build an MDI application using several techniques that you
find in professional Windows applications. You also learned to create and manipulate menus.
Whether or not you choose to use the MDI paradigm will depend on the complexity of your
application and how many forms will need to be displayed at one time.

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