Document.BeginUndoScope method (Visio)

Starts a transaction with a unique scope ID for an instance of Microsoft Visio.

Syntax

expression.BeginUndoScope (bstrUndoScopeName)

expression A variable that represents a Document object.

Parameters

Name Required/Optional Data type Description
bstrUndoScopeName Required String The name of the scope; could appear in the Visio user interface.

Return value

Long

Remarks

If you need to know whether events you receive are the result of a particular operation that you initiated, use the BeginUndoScope and EndUndoScope methods to wrap your operation. In your event handlers, use the IsInScope property to test whether the scope ID returned by the BeginUndoScope method is part of the current context. Make sure you clear the scope ID you stored from the BeginUndoScope property when you receive the ExitScope event with that ID.

You must balance calls to the BeginUndoScope method with calls to the EndUndoScope method. If you call the BeginUndoScope method, you should call the EndUndoScope method as soon as you are finished with the actions that constitute your scope. Also, while actions to multiple documents should be robust within a single scope, closing a document may have the side effect of clearing the undo information for the currently open scope as well as clearing the undo and redo stacks. If that happens, passing bCommit = False to EndUndoScope does not restore the undo information.

You can also use the BeginUndoScope and EndUndoScope methods to add an action defined by an add-on to the Visio undo stream. This is useful when you are operating from modeless scenarios where the initiating agent is part of an add-on's user interface or a modeless programmatic action.

Note

Most Visio actions are already wrapped in internal undo scopes, so add-ons running within the application don't need to call this method.

Example

This example shows how to use the BeginUndoScope method to start a transaction that has a unique scope ID for an instance of Visio.

 
Private WithEvents vsoApplication As Visio.Application 
Private lngScopeID As Long 
 
Public Sub BeginUndoScope_Example() 
 
 Dim vsoShape As Visio.Shape 
 
 'Set the module-level application variable to 
 'trap application-level events. 
 Set vsoApplication = Application 
 
 'Begin a scope and set the module-level scope ID variable. 
 lngScopeID = Application.BeginUndoScope("Draw Shapes") 
 
 'Draw three shapes. 
 Set vsoShape = ActivePage.DrawRectangle(1, 2, 2, 1) 
 ActivePage.DrawOval 3, 4, 4, 3 
 ActivePage.DrawLine 4, 5, 5, 4 
 
 'Change a cell to trigger the CellChanged event. 
 vsoShape.Cells("Width").Formula = 5 
 
 'End and commit this scope. 
 Application.EndUndoScope lngScopeID, True 
 
 End Sub 
 
 Private Sub vsoApplication_CellChanged(ByVal Cell As IVCell) 
 
 'Check to see if this cell change is the result of something 
 'happening within the scope. 
 If vsoApplication.IsInScope(lngScopeID) Then 
 Debug.Print Cell.Name & " changed in scope "; lngScopeID 
 End If 
 
End Sub 
 
Private Sub vsoApplication_EnterScope(ByVal app As IVApplication, _ 
 ByVal nScopeID As Long, _ 
 ByVal bstrDescription As String) 
 
 If vsoApplication.CurrentScope = lngScopeID Then 
 Debug.Print "Entering my scope " & nScopeID 
 Else 
 Debug.Print "Enter Scope " & bstrDescription & "(" & nScopeID & ")" 
 End If 
 
End Sub 
 
Private Sub vsoApplication_ExitScope(ByVal app As IVApplication, _ 
 ByVal nScopeID As Long, _ 
 ByVal bstrDescription As String, _ 
 ByVal bErrOrCancelled As Boolean) 
 
 If vsoApplication.CurrentScope = lngScopeID Then 
 Debug.Print "Exiting my scope " & nScopeID 
 Else 
 Debug.Print "Exit Scope " & bstrDescription & "(" & nScopeID & ")" 
 End If 
 
End Sub

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