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    Using the Cancel btn, to return to previous menu?

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    • TIGT Offline
      TIG Moderator
      last edited by

      You haven't followed my template πŸ˜’
      Try this...

          =begin
          # Name;           Cancel
          # Description;    Initiate Cancel routine in Dialog Box #2
          #                 returning user back to Dialog Box #1
          # Date;           2012/21/08
          # revised         2012/03/09 not working!
      TIG'd 201201003 !
          #--------------------- ------------------------------------------------------
          =end
          require 'sketchup.rb'
      
          module CANCEL       
          #---------------------------------------------------------------------------
                  #Set default settings
                  @height = 9.feet if not @height # floor to floor height   
                  @riser = 16 if not @riser       # no. risers total   
                 
              def self.cancel   
             
                  # Dialog box #1
                  def dialog1()
                  prompts = ["Floor/Floor Height ", "No. Risers"]
                  values = [@height, @riser]
                      @results1 = inputbox prompts, values, "Dialog Box #1"
                      if @results1
                          @height, @riser = @results1
                          @riserheight=@height/@riser  # riser height
                          dialog2()
                      else
                          return nil
                      end
                  end
      
                  # Dialog box #2
                  def dialog2()
                      prompts = ["My RiserHeight  ", "--------"]
                      values = [@riserheight, @any_entry]
                      @results2 = inputbox prompts, values, "Dialog Box #2"
                      if @results2
                          @riserheight, @any_entry = @results2
                          puts "Got here !"
                          [@height,@riser,@riserheight,@any_entry].each{|e| puts e}
                      else
                          dialog1()
                          return nil
                      end   
                  end
         
              end #self.cancel
              ###
              unless file_loaded?(__FILE__)
                  UI.menu("Plugins").add_item("Cancel") { CANCEL.cancel }
              end
              ###
              file_loaded(__FILE__)
      
              # load"cancel.rb"
      
          end #module CANCEL
      

      TIG

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      • Dan RathbunD Offline
        Dan Rathbun
        last edited by

        @tomot said:

        I don't seem to be able to get any menu to appear each time I add @results to my cancel.rb script.

        dialog not menu. A menu is a list of items, that drops down from the application menubar, (or pops up when you click the right mouse button.)

        @tomot said:

        I suppose part of my problem is not understanding how "OK" and "Cancel" magically become part of any dialog box.

        (1) It's a standard Windows API function, that the SketchUp API wraps in a Ruby method.

        (2) You are discussing a certain sub-type of dialog box, called an inputbox, which always gets an OK and Cancel button.

        @tomot said:

        There is no specific Ruby code identifying either of those terms, in the script.

        Because if the user cancels, the return value evals false, otherwise the return value is an array (even if the user changed nothing,) which evals as not false. (Even an empty array and an empty string in Ruby will eval logically as not false.)
        This is why we always do
        return unless results
        or
        if results
        just after the results = UI.inputbox( ... ) call.

        Another sub-type of dialog box, is the messagebox. With that you CAN specify the button set, using constants that begin "MB" (such as MB_OK, MB_YESNOCANCEL, etc.)
        With a messagebox, you DO check the integer return value against the constants IDYES, IDNO or IDCANCEL, etc.

        I'm not here much anymore.

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        • T Offline
          tomot
          last edited by

          @tig said:

          You haven't followed my template πŸ˜’
          Try this...

          I tried your code, but it does not produce an on screen dialog either 😒

          [my plugins](http://thingsvirtual.blogspot.ca/)
          tomot

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          • T Offline
            tomot
            last edited by

            @dan rathbun said:

            Another sub-type of dialog box, is the messagebox. With that you CAN specify the button set, using constants that begin "MB" (such as MB_OK, MB_YESNOCANCEL, etc.)
            With a messagebox, you DO check the integer return value against the constants IDYES, IDNO or IDCANCEL, etc.

            Dan thanks for your comments. which raises one question. Would it then be possible to construct a single dialog box with a 3rd button ie. Calculate btn? Which in my example would calculate the division.

            [my plugins](http://thingsvirtual.blogspot.ca/)
            tomot

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            • TIGT Offline
              TIG Moderator
              last edited by

              Learn web-dialogs and then you can have any buttons you want, called anything you want, doing anything you desire... πŸ˜•

              TIG

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              • Dan RathbunD Offline
                Dan Rathbun
                last edited by

                You only have two choices to construct dialogs with custom controls:

                (1) Write native code for the platform your on, making system calls. (Very low-level nitty gritty advanced programming.)

                (2) Write a WebDialog and use a HTML form.

                @TIG EDIT: PUNCHBUG!

                I'm not here much anymore.

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                • T Offline
                  tomot
                  last edited by

                  @dan rathbun said:

                  You only have two choices to construct dialogs with custom controls:

                  (1) Write native code for the platform your on, making system calls. (Very low-level nitty gritty advanced programming.)

                  (2) Write a WebDialog and use a HTML form.
                  ]

                  There is a (3) option. Maybe Trimble will add some more stuff to the SketchUp Ruby API, however I'm not holding my breath!

                  [my plugins](http://thingsvirtual.blogspot.ca/)
                  tomot

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                  • T Offline
                    tomot
                    last edited by

                    @tig said:

                    Learn web-dialogs and then you can have any buttons you want, called anything you want, doing anything you desire... πŸ˜•

                    Luckily I have shortened my list of things that I desire. However if I were, and if I was my 20's, I would not waste my time learning web-dialogs. I'd learn COBOL, an almost extinct language, yet COBOL still runs 90% of the worlds financial programs. And since there are almost no COBOL programmers left, since most have or are retiring. One could make a great deal of money learning COBOL instead of Web-dialogs. πŸ˜„

                    However that still does not answer my followup question: why does the Cancel dialog not display with your included revisions?

                    [my plugins](http://thingsvirtual.blogspot.ca/)
                    tomot

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                    • Dan RathbunD Offline
                      Dan Rathbun
                      last edited by

                      OMG! I had to take COBOL in college. I hated it.

                      I always wanted to have a "COBOL Sucks!" T-shirt made.

                      I'm not here much anymore.

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                      • TIGT Offline
                        TIG Moderator
                        last edited by

                        Here's an example I know works as I have tested it...

                        require('sketchup.rb')
                        module CANCEL_TEST
                        	#Set default settings
                        	@height = 9.feet if not @height # floor to floor height   
                        	@riser = 16 if not @riser       # no. risers total   
                        		
                        	def self.run()   
                        		self.dialog1()
                        	end
                        	# Dialog box #1
                        	def self.dialog1()
                        		prompts = ["Floor/Floor Height ", "No. Risers"]
                        		values = [@height, @riser]
                        		@results1 = inputbox prompts, values, "Dialog Box #1"
                        		if @results1
                        			@height, @riser = @results1
                        			@riserheight=@height/@riser  # riser height
                        			self.dialog2()
                        		else
                        			return nil
                        		end
                        	end
                        
                        	# Dialog box #2
                        	def self.dialog2()
                        		prompts = ["My RiserHeight  ", "--------"]
                        		values = [@riserheight, @any_entry]
                        		@results2 = inputbox prompts, values, "Dialog Box #2"
                        		if @results2
                        			@riserheight, @any_entry = @results2
                        			puts "Got here !"
                        			[@height,@riser,@riserheight,@any_entry].each{|e| puts e}
                        		else
                        			self.dialog1()
                        			return nil
                        		end   
                        	end
                        
                        	###
                        	unless file_loaded?(__FILE__)
                        		UI.menu("Plugins").add_item("Cancel") { CANCEL_TEST.run() }
                        	end
                        	###
                        	file_loaded(__FILE__)
                        
                        	# load"CANCEL_TEST.rb"
                        end#module
                        
                        

                        IT is now properly structured to loop back into itself is needs be... πŸ˜’

                        TIG

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                        • T Offline
                          tomot
                          last edited by

                          Thanks TIG:

                          I would never have been able to figure out the self.run routine on my own! πŸŽ‰

                          [my plugins](http://thingsvirtual.blogspot.ca/)
                          tomot

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