Web site builder - 106 CHAPTER 4 WORKING WITH REALBASIC MENUS
106 CHAPTER 4 WORKING WITH REALBASIC MENUS Figure 4-4 provides a demonstration of how each of these menu components can be used in building an application s menu system. Figure 4-4. An example of a Help menu as viewed using REALbasic s built-in menu preview option The Default MenuBar By default, REALbasic provides every new desktop application with a new menu bar, as Figure 4-5 shows. By default, this menu bar is named MenuBar1. By default, this menu bar is assigned to the application s default window (Window1). In addition, you have the option of assigning this menu to any other windows you add to your application, making it a shared menu bar. Note Programmers with a Visual Basic background immediately notice that REALbasic approaches menu design a little differently than they are used to. Instead of adding toolbars to windows using the Visual Basic MenuStrip control, REALbasic menu bars are added to REALbasic projects as items managed on the Project Editor. In addition, REALbasic makes it easy for windows to share access to the same menu bar. Visual Basic programmers will be happy to find out, however, that the process of adding menus, menu items, and submenus is nearly the same in REALbasic as it is in Visual Basic.
Note: In case you are looking for affordable and reliable webhost to host and run your j2ee application check Vision J2ee Web Hosting services.