CustomControl.Verb Property (Access)

You can use the Verb property to specify the operation to perform when an OLE object is activated, which is permitted when the control'sAction property is set to acOLEActivate. Read/write Long.

Syntax

expression .Verb

expression A variable that represents a CustomControl object.

Remarks

You can set the Verb property by specifying an Integer data type value indicating the position of a verb in the list of verbs returned by the ObjectVerbs property. You can set the Verb property to 1 to specify the first verb in the list, you can set it to 2 to specify the second verb in the list, and so on.

If you don't use the ObjectVerbs property to identify a specific verb, you can set the Verb property to one of the following values to indicate the operation to perform. These values specify the standard verbs supported by all objects.

Constant

Description

acOLEVerbPrimary

Performs the default operation for the object.

acOLEVerbShow

Activates the object for editing.

acOLEVerbOpen

Opens the object in a separate application window.

acOLEVerbHide

For embedded objects, hides the application that was used to create the object.

With some applications' objects, you can use these additional values.

Constant

Description

acOLEVerbInPlaceUIActivate

Activates the object for editing within the control. The menus and toolbars of the OLE server become available in the OLE container.

acOLEVerbInPlaceActivate

Activates the object within the control. The menus and toolbars of the OLE server aren't available in the OLE container.

Each object supports its own set of verbs. For example, many objects support the verbs Edit and Play. You can use the ObjectVerbs and ObjectVerbsCount properties to find out which verbs are supported by an object.

Microsoft Access automatically uses an object's default verb if the user double-clicks an object for which the AutoActivate property is set to Double-Click.

Example

The following example activates the control "OLEUnbound0" in the form "frmOperations" by opening up the OLE object in its own application window for editing. In this case, "OLEUnbound0" contains a new bitmap image, which is linked to the Microsoft Paint program.

With Forms.Item("frmOperations").Controls.Item("OLEUnbound0") 
 .Action = acOLEActivate 
 .Verb = acOLEVerbOpen 
End With

See Also

Concepts

CustomControl Object Members

CustomControl Object